Abstract:
A processor which decodes and executes an instruction sequence includes: a state hold unit for holding, when a predetermined instruction is executed, a renewal state for an execution result of the predetermined instruction; an obtaining unit for obtaining an instruction sequence composed of instructions matching instructions assigned to an instruction set of the processor, where the instruction set is assigned first conditional instructions, a first state condition for a first conditional instruction being mutually exclusive with a second state condition for a second conditional instruction which has a same operation code as the first conditional instruction, the instruction set not being assigned the second conditional instruction, and the first state condition and the second state condition specifying either of one state and a plurality of states; a decoding unit for decoding each instruction in the obtained instruction sequence one by one; a judging unit for judging whether the renewal state is included in either of the state and the plurality of states specified by the first state condition in the first conditional instruction, when the decoding unit decodes the first conditional instruction; and an execution unit for executing, only if a judgement result by the judging unit is affirmative, an operation specified by the operation code in the first conditional instruction decoded by the decoding unit.

Description:
[1]    1. This application is based on applications Nos. H9-234354 and H10-095645 filed in Japan, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference.  
         BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION  
         [2]    2. 1. Field of the Invention  
           [3]    3. The present invention relates to a processor and an instruction conversion apparatus, and in particular to a technique for reducing the number of types of instructions and the processor hardware scale when conditional instructions are used.  
           [4]    4. 2. Related Art  
           [5]    5. In recent years, improvements in performance and processing speed of appliances using embedded microprocessors have led to an in creasing demand for microprocessors (hereinafter simply referred to as “processors”) with high processing capability.  
           [6]    6. A basic technique for increasing processing speed is a pipeline processing.  
           [7]    7. In the pipeline processing, the processing of each instruction is divided into a plurality of processing units (pipeline stages) and pipeline stages for different instructions are executed in parallel so that processing speed is improved.  
           [8]    8. The pipeline processing is disturbed, however, (pipeline stalls occur) when executing a branch, reducing the execution performance of the pipelines to below an ideal level. This phenomenon is called a “branch hazard”.  
           [9]    9. Recent processors use conditional instructions instead of branch instructions to reduce branch hazards to improve their processing capabilities. The conditional instructions are, for instance, described in detail in “The ARM RISC Chip-A Programmer&#39;s Guide”, Addison-Wesly Publishing Company Inc.  
           [10]    10.FIG. 30 shows an instruction sequence including a conventional conditional transfer instruction. In FIG. 30, each of the legends “r0”, “r1”, and “r2” represents a register. The instruction  3001  is a transfer instruction for transferring the value “1” to the register “r0”. The instruction  3002  is a comparison instruction for comparing the values of the registers “r1” and “r2” and setting various flags to indicate the comparison result. The instruction  3003  is a conditional transfer instruction for referring to the flags and, when the values compared by the instruction  3002  are equal, transferring the value “0” to the register “r0”.  
           [11]    11.FIG. 31 shows a list of conventional conditional transfer instructions  3101 . This list includes six types of conditional transfer instructions  3101 . The condition  3102  is a sign indicating a condition specified by each conditional transfer instruction. When the operation objects “a” and “b” are compared by a comparison instruction, the condition is one of the following cases: “a” and “b” are equal; “a” and “b” are not equal; “a” is greater than “b”; “a” is greater than or equal to “b”; “a” is smaller than “b”; and “a” is smaller than or equal to “b”. Each conditional transfer instruction is executed when its condition is satisfied.  
           [12]    12.FIG. 32 shows conventional instructions, such as comparison instructions (CMP instructions), conditional addition instructions for performing addition when their conditions are satisfied, conditional transfer instructions for performing transfer when their conditions are satisfied, and conditional branch instructions for performing branch when their conditions are satisfied. In these instructions, last two characters of the operation code of each instruction in mnemonic code specify the condition.  
           [13]    13. The number of types of conditions of each conditional instruction and each conditional branch instruction shown in FIG. 32 is ten because the conditions shown in FIG. 32 include conditions for data with signs, in addition to the conditions shown in FIG. 31.  
           [14]    14. Accordingly, the total number of types of instructions including a comparison instruction, conditional instructions for each of two operations (conditional transfer instructions and conditional addition instructions), and conditional branch instructions is thirty-one. Here, if there are A operations of conditional instructions, the total number is represented as 11+(10×A).  
           [15]    15. There are also conditional instructions whose number of types is reduced. These conditional instructions are described in detail in “Hitachi Single Chip RISC Microcomputer SH7000/SH7600 Series Programming Manual”, Hitachi, Ltd., p57-p58, p69-p70, and p75-p78.  
           [16]    16.FIG. 33 shows comparison instructions, conditional addition instructions, and conditional branch instructions where the number of instruction types is reduced.  
           [17]    17. Here, the conditional instructions and the conditional branch instructions shown in FIG. 33 use only two types of conditions, that is, a conditional flag is set or is reset. Therefore, FIG. 33 shows two types of conditional addition instructions, two types of conditional transfer instructions, two types of conditional branch instructions, and five types of comparison instructions for setting or resetting the conditional flag.  
           [18]    18. Accordingly, the total number of types of instructions including comparison instructions, conditional instructions for each of two operations, and conditional branch instructions is eleven. Here, if there are A types of operations of conditional instructions, the total number of types of instructions including comparison instructions, conditional instructions for each operation, and conditional branch instructions is represented as 7+(2×A).  
           [19]    19. Processors performing pipeline processing need to use more types of conditional instructions to reduce branch hazards as much as possible.  
           [20]    20. However, because each instruction executed by a processor has a fixed-length bit pattern, the number of types of instructions which the processor can use is limited.  
           [21]    21. Accordingly, the number of types of conditional instructions which the processor can use is limited. As the number of types of instructions increases, more hardware is required to decode instructions, increasing the cost of the processor.  
         SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION  
         [22]    22. In view of the stated problems, the object of the present invention is to provide an instruction conversion apparatus which reduces the number of types of instructions and a processor whose hardware scale is reduced, when conditional instructions are used.  
           [23]    23. To achieve the above object, the processor of the present invention which decodes and executes an instruction sequence includes: a state hold unit for holding, when a predetermined instruction is executed, a renewal state for an execution result of the predetermined instruction; an obtaining unit for obtaining an instruction sequence composed of instructions matching instructions assigned to an instruction set of the processor, where the instruction set is assigned first conditional instructions, a first state condition for a first conditional instruction being mutually exclusive with a second state condition for a second conditional instruction which has a same operation code as the first conditional instruction, the instruction set not being assigned the second conditional instruction, and the first state condition and the second state condition specifying either of one state and a plurality of states; a decoding unit for decoding each instruction in the obtained instruction sequence one by one; a judging unit for judging whether the renewal state is included in either of the state and the plurality of states specified by the first state condition in the first conditional instruction, when the decoding unit decodes the first conditional instruction; and an execution unit for executing, only if a judgement result by the judging unit is affirmative, an operation specified by the operation code in the first conditional instruction decoded by the decoding unit.  
           [24]    24. With the stated construction, the processor of the present invention uses an instruction set including only conditional instructions specifying one out of a pair of exclusive conditions, not including conditional instructions specifying the other of the pair. Therefore, the number of types of conditional instructions is reduced, in comparison with a conventional processor.  
           [25]    25. Accordingly, hardware scale of an instruction decoder can be reduced. Also, when the number of types of instructions is limited, the processor of the present invention can be provided with conditional instructions of more operations. As a result, when the processor of the present invention performs pipeline processing, branch hazards can be reduced.  
           [26]    26. Here, the renewal state may show a relation between magnitudes of two comparison objects a and b, the relation corresponding to an execution result of a type of comparison instruction, where execution of a first conditional instruction is only possible after a comparison instruction, and the instruction set is assigned three types of first conditional instructions, the first condition states of the three types of first conditional instructions being: 1. one out of “a=b” and “a≠b”; 2. one out of “a≧b” and “a&lt;b”; and 3. one out of “a≦b” and “a&gt;b”.  
           [27]    27. With the stated construction, the processor of the present invention uses three types of conditional instructions for each operation, so that the number of types of conditional instructions can be reduced by half of that of a conventional processor.  
           [28]    28. Therefore, hardware scale of an instruction decoder can be reduced. Also, when the number of types of instructions is limited, the number of types of conditional instructions can be increased by twice of that of a conventional processor. Therefore, when the processor of the present invention performs pipeline processing, branch hazards can be reduced.  
           [29]    29. Here, an operation code included in a conditional instruction may be one of a transfer operation code, an arithmetic operation code, and a logic operation code.  
           [30]    30. With the stated construction, the operation of each conditional instruction included in the instruction set of the processor of the present invention is a transfer operation, an arithmetic operation, and a logic operation.  
           [31]    31. Therefore, the processor of the present invention can use conditional transfer instructions, conditional arithmetic instructions, and conditional logic instructions. Accordingly, when the processor of the present invention performs pipeline processing, branch hazards can be reduced.  
           [32]    32. To achieve the above object, the processor of the present invention which decodes and executes an instruction sequence includes: an obtaining unit for obtaining an instruction sequence composed of instructions matching instructions assigned to an instruction set of the processor, where the instruction set is assigned at least one first conditional flag setting instruction, at least one second conditional flag setting instruction, and at least one conditional execution instruction, each first conditional flag setting instruction including a first condition, and each second conditional flag setting instruction including a second condition, each first condition being mutually exclusive with one of the second conditions, each conditional execution instruction including an operation code that is not included in any other conditional execution instruction in the instruction set; a decoding unit for decoding each instruction in the obtained instruction sequence one by one; a conditional flag for holding a judgement result as to whether a predetermined condition is satisfied; a judging unit for judging, when the decoding unit decodes the first conditional flag setting instruction, whether the first condition in the first conditional flag setting instruction is satisfied and has the conditional flag hold a judgement result for the first condition and, when the decoding unit decodes the second conditional flag setting instruction, judges whether the second condition in the second conditional flag setting instruction is satisfied and has the conditional flag hold a judgement result for the second condition; and an execution unit for executing, only if the decoding unit decodes the conditional execution instruction and the judgement result held by the conditional flag indicates that a condition for the conditional execution instruction is satisfied, an operation specified by the operation code in the conditional execution instruction.  
           [33]    33. With the stated construction, the processor of the present invention uses an instruction set including conditional flag setting instructions and instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied, not including instructions which are executed when their conditions are not satisfied. Therefore, the instruction set includes only one type of instruction which is executed when its condition is satisfied for each operation.  
           [34]    34. A conventional processor uses ten types of conditional instructions for each operation and two types of instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied. As the number of operations of instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied increases, the processor of the present invention uses less types of the instructions.  
           [35]    35. Accordingly, hardware scale and cost of an instruction decoder can be reduced. Also, when the number of types of instructions are limited, the processor of the present invention can use conditional instructions for more operations. Therefore, when the processor of the present invention performs pipeline processing, branch hazards can be reduced.  
           [36]    36. Here, each of the first conditional flag setting instruction and the second conditional flag setting instruction may specify two comparison objects a and b, where the instruction set is assigned three types of first conditional flag setting instructions and three types of second conditional flag setting instructions, the first conditions of the first conditional flag setting instructions being a combination of the following conditions: 1. one out of “a=b” and “a≠b”; 2. one out of “a≧b” and “a&lt;b”; and 3. one out of “a≦b” and “a&gt;b”, the second conditions of the second conditional instructions being three mutually exclusive conditions for the three first conditions.  
           [37]    37. With the stated construction, the processor of the present invention uses six types of conditional flag setting instructions and the conditions of these instructions are three pairs of exclusive conditions. Therefore, without instructions which are executed when their conditions are not satisfied, the processor of the present invention can perform the same processing as a conventional processor.  
           [38]    38. Accordingly, the number of types of instructions can be reduced without sacrificing the performance of the processor of the present invention.  
           [39]    39. Here, the instruction set may be further assigned two types of first conditional flag setting instructions and two types of second conditional flag setting instructions, the first conditions of the first conditional flag setting instructions being a combination of the following conditions: 4. one out of “a≧b” and “a&lt;b”; and 5. one out of “a≧b” and “a&gt;b” (where a and b of conditions 4 and 5 are compared with signs of a and b being taken into account), and the second conditions of the second conditional flag setting instructions being mutually exclusive with the first conditions.  
           [40]    40. With the stated construction, the processor of the present invention uses ten types of conditional flag setting instructions and the conditions of these instructions are five pairs of exclusive conditions. Therefore, without instructions which are executed when their conditions are not satisfied, the processor of the present invention can perform the same processing as a conventional processor.  
           [41]    41. Accordingly, the number of types of instructions can be reduced without sacrificing the performance of the processor of the present invention.  
           [42]    42. Here, an operation code included in a conditional execution instruction may be one of a transfer operation code, an arithmetic operation code, a logic operation code, and a branch operation code.  
           [43]    43. With the stated construction, the operation of each instruction which is executed when its condition is satisfied included in the instruction set of the processor of the present invention is a transfer operation, an arithmetic operation, a logic operation, or a branch operation.  
           [44]    44. Therefore, the processor of the present invention can use transfer instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied, arithmetic instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied, and logic instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied, and branch instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied. Accordingly, when the processor of the present invention performs pipeline processing, branch hazards can be reduced.  
           [45]    45. To achieve the above object, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention converts instruction sequences not including conditional instructions into instruction sequences including conditional instructions, each of the conditional instructions including a condition and an operation code and having a processor execute an operation specified by the operation code only if the condition is satisfied, and includes: an obtaining unit for obtaining an instruction sequence which does not include conditional instructions; an instruction sequence detection unit for detecting, out of the obtained instruction sequence, a conversion target instruction sequence which transfers different transfer objects to a same storage resource depending on whether a predetermined condition is satisfied; a judging unit for judging whether an instruction set of a specialized processor is assigned a conditional instruction including a same condition as the predetermined condition; and a conversion unit for converting, when a judgement result by the judging unit is affirmative, the conversion target instruction sequence into an instruction sequence including a conditional instruction including the predetermined condition and for interchanging, when the judgement result by the judging unit is negative, the transfer objects of the conversion target instruction sequence and converts the conversion target instruction sequence into an instruction sequence including a conditional instruction including a condition that is mutually exclusive with the predetermined condition.  
           [46]    46. With the stated construction, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention does not generate undecodable conditional instructions but decodable conditional instructions for the specialized processor.  
           [47]    47. Therefore, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention can reduce the number of types of conditional instructions without reducing total number of conditional instructions, so that the number of fields for including instructions and a code size can be reduced. Also, the number of types of conditional instructions decodable by the specialized processor can be reduced without sacrificing the performance of the specialized processor.  
           [48]    48. Accordingly, hardware scale of an instruction decoder of the specialized processor can be reduced. Also, when the number of types of instructions is limited, the specialized processor can use conditional instructions for more operations in comparison with a conventional processor. As a result, when the specialized processor performs pipeline processing, branch hazards can be reduced.  
           [49]    49. Here, the instruction set of the specialized processor may be assigned a conditional instruction including a condition that is mutually exclusive with a condition included in a conditional instruction judged as not assigned to the instruction set by the judging unit, and conditions included in conditional instructions for a same operation assigned to the instruction set are not mutually exclusive.  
           [50]    50. With the stated construction, the judging unit of the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention judges that the specialized processor uses an instruction set including conditional instructions specifying only one out of a pair of exclusive conditions. Therefore, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention does not generate conditional instructions specifying the other of the pair of exclusive conditions.  
           [51]    51. Here, execution of a conditional instruction may be only possible after a comparison instruction, and the instruction set may be assigned three types of conditional instructions for each operation according to a relation between magnitudes of two comparison objects compared by the comparison instruction, the conditions of the three types of conditional instructions being: 1. one out of “a=b” and “a≠b”; 2. one out of “a≧b” and “a&lt;b”; and 3. one out of “a≦b” and “a&gt;b”.  
           [52]    52. With the stated construction, the judging unit of the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention judges that the specialized processor can decode three types of conditional instructions for each operation. Therefore, the number of types of conditional instructions is reduced by half of six types of conditional instructions for a conventional processor.  
           [53]    53. Here, each of the transfer objects is one of a numerical value, a value indicated by a different storage resource, an operation result of a numerical value and a value indicated by the different storage resource, an operation result of numerical values, and an operation result of values indicated by the different storage resource.  
           [54]    54. With the stated construction, the operation specified by a conditional instruction is a transfer operation, an arithmetic operation, and a logic operation.  
           [55]    55. Therefore, the instruction conversion apparatus can generate conditional instructions for all of transfer instructions, arithmetic instructions, and logic instructions. Accordingly, when the specialized processor performs pipeline processing, branch hazards is reduced.  
           [56]    56. Here, the conversion target instruction sequence may consecutively include a conditional branch instruction for branching to a next instruction but two, a transfer instruction for transferring a transfer object to a storage resource, an unconditional branch instruction for branching to a next instruction but one, and a transfer instruction for transferring another transfer object to the storage resource.  
           [57]    57. With the stated construction, the instruction sequence detection unit detects this instruction sequence.  
           [58]    58. To achieve the above object, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention converts conditional instructions included in instruction sequences, each of the conditional instructions including a condition and an operation code and having a processor execute an operation specified by the operation code only if the condition is satisfied, and includes: an obtaining unit for obtaining an instruction sequence including conditional instructions; a conditional instruction detection unit for detecting a conditional instruction included in the obtained instruction sequence; a first judging unit for judging whether the detected conditional instruction is assigned to an instruction set of a specialized processor; a second judging unit for judging, when a judgement result by the first judging unit is negative, whether the obtained instruction sequence includes a conversion target instruction sequence which transfers different transfer objects to a same storage resource depending on whether a predetermined condition of the detected conditional instruction is satisfied; and a conversion unit for interchanging, when a judgement result by the second judging unit is affirmative, the transfer objects and converts the detected conditional instruction into a conditional instruction including a condition that is mutually exclusive with the predetermined condition.  
           [59]    59. With the stated construction, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention can converts undecodable conditional instructions into decodable conditional instructions for the specialized processor.  
           [60]    60. Therefore, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention can reduce the number of types of conditional instructions without reducing total number of conditional instructions, so that the number of fields for including instructions and a code size can be reduced. Also, the number of types of conditional instructions decodable by the specialized processor can be reduced without sacrificing the performance of the specialized processor.  
           [61]    61. Accordingly, hardware scale of an instruction decoder of the specialized processor can be reduced. Also, when the number of types of instructions is limited, the specialized processor can use conditional instructions for more operations. As a result, when the specialized processor performs pipeline processing, branch hazards can be reduced.  
           [62]    62. Here, the instruction set of the specialized processor may be assigned a conditional instruction including a condition being mutually exclusive with a condition included in a conditional instruction judged as not assigned to the instruction set by the first judging unit, and conditions included in conditional instructions for a same operation assigned to the instruction set are not mutually exclusive.  
           [63]    63. With the stated construction, the first judging unit of the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention judges that the specialized processor uses an instruction set including conditional instructions specifying only one out of a pair of exclusive conditions. Therefore, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention does not generate conditional instructions specifying the other of the pair of exclusive conditions.  
           [64]    64. Here, the conversion target instruction sequence consecutively may include a comparison instruction for comparing two comparison objects, a transfer instruction for transferring a predetermined transfer object to a predetermined storage resource, and a conditional instruction for transferring a transfer object that differs from the predetermined transfer object to the predetermined storage resource only if a predetermined condition is satisfied.  
           [65]    65. With the stated construction, the instruction sequence detection unit detects this instruction sequence.  
           [66]    66. Here, the conversion unit may include: an inverse conversion unit for converting, when a judgement result by the second judging unit is negative, the instruction sequence including the detected conditional instruction into an instruction sequence not including the detected conditional instruction.  
           [67]    67. With the stated construction, even if a conditional instruction cannot be decoded by the specialized processor and cannot be converted into a conditional instruction which can be decoded by the specialized process, this conditional instruction is converted into an original instruction sequence.  
           [68]    68. Therefore, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention generates executable instruction sequences for the specialized processor.  
           [69]    69. To achieve the above object, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention converts an instruction sequence not including a conditional flag setting instruction and a conditional execution instruction into an instruction sequence including a conditional flag setting instruction and a conditional execution instruction, each conditional flag setting instruction including a condition, having a specialized processor judge whether the condition is satisfied, and having a conditional flag hold a judgement result as to whether the condition is satisfied, each conditional execution instruction including an operation code and having the specialized processor execute an operation specified by the operation code only if a condition of the conditional execution instruction is satisfied. The instruction conversion apparatus includes: an obtaining unit for obtaining an instruction sequence which does not include conditional flag setting instructions and conditional execution instructions; an instruction sequence detection unit for detecting, out of the obtained instruction sequence, a conversion target instruction sequence which transfers different transfer objects to a same storage resource depending on whether a predetermined condition is satisfied; and a conversion unit for converting the conversion target instruction sequence into an instruction sequence which includes a conditional flag setting instruction including the predetermined condition and a conditional execution instruction including an operation code which specifies an operation for transferring a transfer object to the storage resource when the predetermined condition is satisfied.  
           [70]    70. With the stated construction, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention generates decodable conditional flag setting instruction and decodable instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied for the specialized processor.  
           [71]    71. Therefore, the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention can reduce the number of types of conditional instructions without reducing total number of conditional instructions, so that the number of fields for including instructions and a code size can be reduced. Also, the number of types of conditional instructions decodable by the specialized processor can be reduced without sacrificing the performance of the specialized processor.  
           [72]    72. Accordingly, hardware scale of an instruction decoder of the specialized processor can be reduced. Also, when the number of types of instructions is limited, the specialized processor can use conditional instructions for more operations. As a result, when the specialized processor performs pipeline processing, branch hazards can be reduced.  
           [73]    73. When the specialized processor uses instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied for 20 operations, for instance, it is enough to include in an instruction set 30 types of instructions including 10 types of conditional flag setting instruction and 20 types of instruction which are executed when their conditions are satisfied (one type of the instruction which is executed when its condition is satisfied×20 operations).  
           [74]    74. Here, a condition of a conditional flag setting instruction which is convertible by the conversion unit may be mutually exclusive with a condition of another conditional flag setting instruction which is convertible by the conversion unit.  
           [75]    75. With the stated construction, during the generation of instructions which are executed when their conditions are not satisfied, it is enough for the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention to generate conditional flag setting instruction specifying exclusive conditions and instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied. Therefore, the instruction set does not need to include instructions which are executed when their conditions are not satisfied.  
           [76]    76. Accordingly, instructions which are executed when their conditions are not satisfied can be eliminated without sacrificing the performance of the specialized processor.  
           [77]    77. Here, each conditional flag setting instruction may specify two comparison objects a and b, where the instruction set is assigned three types of first conditional flag setting instructions and three types of second conditional flag setting instructions, the first conditions of the first conditional flag setting instructions being a combination of the following conditions: 1. one out of “a=b” and “a≠b”; 2. one out of “a≧b” and “a&lt;b”; and 3. one out of “a≦b” and “a&gt;b”, the second conditions of the second conditional flag setting instructions being three mutually exclusive conditions for the three first conditions.  
           [78]    78. With the stated construction, the conversion unit of the instruction conversion apparatus of the present invention generates six types of conditional flag setting instruction. Each pair of the conditions of these instructions is in an exclusive relation. Therefore, even if an instruction set does not include instructions which are executed when their conditions are not satisfied, the same processing as a conventional processor can be performed.  
           [79]    79. Accordingly, the number of types of instructions can be reduced without sacrificing the performance of the specialized processor.  
           [80]    80. Here, the conversion target instruction sequence may consecutively include a comparison instruction for comparing two comparison objects, a conditional branch instruction for branching to a next instruction but two when a predetermined condition is satisfied, a transfer instruction for transferring a predetermined transfer object to a predetermined storage resource, an unconditional branch instruction for branching to a next instruction but one, and a transfer instruction for transferring a transfer object that differs from the predetermined transfer object to the predetermined storage resource.  
           [81]    81. With the stated construction, the instruction sequence detection unit detects this instruction sequence.  
           [82]    82. Here, the conversion target instruction sequence may consecutively include a comparison instruction for comparing two comparison objects, a transfer instruction for transferring a predetermined transfer object to a predetermined storage resource, and a conditional instruction for transferring a transfer object that differs from the predetermined transfer object to the predetermined storage resource only if a predetermined condition is satisfied.  
           [83]    83. With the stated construction, the instruction sequence detection unit detects this instruction sequence.  
           [84]    84. Here, the conversion target instruction sequence may consecutively include a comparison instruction for comparing two comparison objects, a conditional instruction for transferring a predetermined transfer object to a predetermined storage resource only if a predetermined condition is not satisfied, and a conditional instruction for transferring a transfer object that differs from the predetermined transfer object to the predetermined storage resource only if the predetermined condition is satisfied.  
           [85]    85. With the stated construction, the instruction sequence detection unit detects this instruction sequence.  
           [86]    86. To achieve the above object, the computer-readable recording medium of the present invention records an instruction conversion program for having a computer perform a method of converting instruction sequences not including conditional instructions into instruction sequences including conditional instructions, each of the conditional instructions including a condition and an operation code and having a processor execute an operation specified by the operation code only if the condition is satisfied. The program includes: an obtaining step for obtaining an instruction sequence which does not include conditional instructions; an instruction sequence detection step for detecting, out of the obtained instruction sequence, a conversion target instruction sequence which transfers different transfer objects to a same storage resource depending on whether a predetermined condition is satisfied; a judging step for judging whether an instruction set of a specialized processor is assigned a conditional instruction including a same condition as the predetermined condition; and a conversion step for converting, when a judgement result in the judging step is affirmative, the conversion target instruction sequence into an instruction sequence including a conditional instruction including the predetermined condition and for interchanging, when the judgement result in the judging step is negative, the transfer objects of the conversion target instruction sequence and converts the conversion target instruction sequence into an instruction sequence including a conditional instruction including a condition that is mutually exclusive with the predetermined condition.  
           [87]    87. With the stated steps, the instruction conversion program of the present invention does not generate undecodable conditional instructions but decodable conditional instructions for the specialized processor.  
           [88]    88. Therefore, the instruction conversion program of the present invention can reduce the number of types of conditional instructions without reducing total number of conditional instructions, so that the number of fields for including instructions and a code size can be reduced. Also, the number of types of conditional instructions decodable by the specialized processor can be reduced without sacrificing the performance of the specialized processor.  
           [89]    89. Accordingly, hardware scale of an instruction decoder of the specialized processor can be reduced. Also, when the number of types of instructions is limited, the specialized processor can use conditional instructions for more operations in comparison with a conventional processor. As a result, when the specialized processor performs pipeline processing, branch hazards can be reduced.  
           [90]    90. To achieve the above object, the computer-readable recording medium of the present invention records an instruction conversion program for having a computer perform a method of converting conditional instructions included in instruction sequences, each of the conditional instructions including a condition and an operation code and having a processor execute an operation specified by the operation code only if the condition is satisfied. The program includes: an obtaining step for obtaining an instruction sequence including conditional instructions; a conditional instruction detection step for detecting a conditional instruction included in the obtained instruction sequence; a first judging step for judging whether the detected conditional instruction is assigned to an instruction set of a specialized processor; a second judging step for judging, when a judgement result in the first judging step is negative, whether the obtained instruction sequence includes a conversion target instruction sequence which transfers different transfer objects to a same storage resource depending on whether a predetermined condition of the detected conditional instruction is satisfied; and a conversion step for interchanging, when a judgement result in the second judging step is affirmative, the transfer objects and converts the detected conditional instruction into a conditional instruction including a condition that is mutually exclusive with the predetermined condition.  
           [91]    91. With the stated steps, the instruction conversion program of the present invention can converts undecodable conditional instructions into decodable conditional instructions for the specialized processor.  
           [92]    92. Therefore, the instruction conversion program of the present invention can reduce the number of types of conditional instructions without reducing total number of conditional instructions, so that the number of fields for including instructions and a code size can be reduced. Also, the number of types of conditional instructions decodable by the specialized processor can be reduced without sacrificing the performance of the specialized processor.  
           [93]    93. Accordingly, hardware scale of an instruction decoder of the specialized processor can be reduced. Also, when the number of types of instructions is limited, the specialized processor can use conditional instructions for more operations. As a result, when the specialized processor performs pipeline processing, branch hazards can be reduced.  
           [94]    94. To achieve the above object, the computer-readable recording medium of the present invention records an instruction conversion program for having a computer perform a method of converting an instruction sequence not including a conditional flag setting instruction and a conditional execution instruction into an instruction sequence including a conditional flag setting instruction and a conditional execution instruction, each conditional flag setting instruction including a condition, having a specialized processor judge whether the condition is satisfied, and having a conditional flag hold a judgement result as to whether the condition is satisfied, each conditional execution instruction including an operation code and having the specialized processor execute an operation specified by the operation code only if a condition of the conditional execution instruction is satisfied. The program includes: an obtaining step for obtaining an instruction sequence which does not include conditional flag setting instructions and conditional execution instructions; an instruction sequence detection step for detecting, out of the obtained instruction sequence, a conversion target instruction sequence which transfers different transfer objects to a same storage resource depending on whether a predetermined condition is satisfied; and a conversion step for converting the conversion target instruction sequence into an instruction sequence which includes a conditional flag setting instruction including the predetermined condition and a conditional execution instruction including an operation code which specifies an operation for transferring a transfer object to the storage resource when the predetermined condition is satisfied.  
           [95]    95. With the stated steps, the instruction conversion program of the present invention generates decodable conditional flag setting instruction and decodable instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied for the specialized processor.  
           [96]    96. Therefore, the instruction conversion program of the present invention can reduce the number of types of conditional instructions without reducing total number of conditional instructions, so that the number of fields for including instructions and a code size can be reduced. Also, the number of types of conditional instructions decodable by the specialized processor can be reduced without sacrificing the performance of the specialized processor.  
           [97]    97. Accordingly, hardware scale of an instruction decoder of the specialized processor can be reduced. Also, when the number of types of instructions is limited, the specialized processor can use conditional instructions for more operations. As a result, when the specialized processor performs pipeline processing, branch hazards can be reduced.  
           [98]    98. When the specialized processor uses instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied for 20 operations, for instance, it is enough to include in an instruction set 30 types of instructions including 10 types of conditional flag setting instruction and 20 types of instruction which are executed when their conditions are satisfied (one type of the instruction which is executed when its condition is satisfied×20 operations).  
           [99]    99. As described above, the present invention has great practical uses.  
       
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS  
       [100]    100. These and other objects, advantages and features of the invention will become apparent from the following description thereof taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings which illustrate a specific embodiment of the invention. In the drawings:  
         [101]    101.FIG. 1 shows a construction of the processor of the present invention which executes machine instructions generated by the compiler of the present invention;  
         [102]    102.FIG. 2 shows a list of example conditional transfer instructions which the processor Embodiment 1 can execute;  
         [103]    103.FIG. 3 is a flowchart showing the operation of the compiler of Embodiment 1;  
         [104]    104.FIGS. 4A and 4B show examples of C source programs written in C language;  
         [105]    105.FIGS. 5A and 5B show intermediate code sequences which do not include conditional transfer instructions and are respectively generated from the C source programs shown in FIGS. 4A and 4B;  
         [106]    106.FIGS. 6A and 6B show intermediate code sequences which include conditional transfer instructions and are respectively generated from the intermediate code sequence shown in FIGS. 5A and 5B;  
         [107]    107.FIGS. 7A and 7B show machine instruction sequences respectively generated from the intermediate code sequences shown in FIGS. 6A and 6B;  
         [108]    108.FIG. 8 is a flowchart showing the operation of the compiler of Embodiment 2;  
         [109]    109.FIG. 9 shows an intermediate code sequence including a conditional transfer instruction generated from the C source program shown in FIG. 4B;  
         [110]    110.FIG. 10 shows a list of example conditional branch instructions which the processor of Embodiment 3 can execute;  
         [111]    111.FIG. 11 is a flowchart showing the operation of the compiler of Embodiment 3;  
         [112]    112.FIG. 12 shows an intermediate code sequence which the processor of Embodiment 3 can decode and is generated from the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 5B which the process of Embodiment 3 cannot decode;  
         [113]    113.FIG. 13 shows a machine instruction sequence generated from the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 12;  
         [114]    114.FIG. 14 shows comparison instructions, a conditional addition instruction, a conditional transfer instruction, and a conditional branch instruction of Embodiment 4, where the number of types of instructions is reduced;  
         [115]    115.FIG. 15 shows the construction of the compiler of Embodiment 4;  
         [116]    116. FIGS.  16  shows an example of the C source code  1511  which is written in C language and is input into the compiler of Embodiment 4;  
         [117]    117.FIG. 17 shows the first intermediate code  1512 ;  
         [118]    118.FIG. 18 shows the second intermediate code  1513 ;  
         [119]    119.FIG. 19 shows the machine instruction  1515 ;  
         [120]    120.FIG. 20 is a flowchart showing the operation of the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  of Embodiment 4;  
         [121]    121.FIG. 21 shows the first intermediate code  1512 ;  
         [122]    122.FIG. 22 is a flowchart showing the operation of the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  of Embodiment 5;  
         [123]    123.FIG. 23 shows the first intermediate code  1512 ;  
         [124]    124.FIG. 24 is a flowchart showing the operation of the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  of Embodiment 6;  
         [125]    125.FIG. 25 shows a list of example conditional addition instructions which the processor of Embodiment 1 can execute;  
         [126]    126.FIG. 26 shows an example of a C source program written in C language;  
         [127]    127.FIG. 27 shows an intermediate code sequence which does not include conditional addition instructions and is generated from the C source program shown in FIG. 26;  
         [128]    128.FIG. 28 shows an intermediate code sequence which includes a conditional addition instruction and is generated from the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 27;  
         [129]    129.FIG. 29 shows a machine instruction sequence generated from the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 28;  
         [130]    130.FIG. 30 shows an instruction sequence including a conventional conditional transfer instruction;  
         [131]    131.FIG. 31 shows a list of conventional transfer instructions;  
         [132]    132.FIG. 32 shows a conventional comparison instruction (CMP instruction), conditional addition instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied, conditional transfer instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied, and conditional branch instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied; and  
         [133]    133.FIG. 33 shows comparison instructions, conditional addition instructions, conditional transfer instructions, and conditional branch instructions, where the number of types of instructions is reduced.  
     
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS  
       [134]    134.FIG. 1 shows the construction of the processor of the present invention which executes machine instructions generated by the compiler of the present invention.  
         [135]    135. This processor includes the operation flag hold means  101 , instruction decoding means  102 , the instruction execution means  103 , and the instruction execution halt means  104 .  
         [136]    136. The operation flag hold means  101  holds an operation flag showing an instruction execution state, and outputs the operation flag state signal  111  showing the instruction execution state.  
         [137]    137. The instruction decoding means  102  decodes machine instructions and outputs the instruction execution means control signal  112 . When decoding conditional instructions, the instruction decoding means  102  outputs the conditional instruction designation signal  113 .  
         [138]    138. The instruction execution means  103  executes instructions according to the instruction execution means control signal output from the instruction decoding means  102 .  
         [139]    139. The instruction execution halt means  104  receives the operation flag state signal  111  output from the operation flag hold means  101  and the conditional instruction designation signal  113  output from the instruction decoding means  102 . When a condition is not satisfied, the instruction execution halt means  104  outputs the instruction execution halt signal  113  to the instruction execution means  103  so that the instruction execution means  103  halts its instruction execution.  
         [140]    140. It should be noted here that in this processor, the instruction execution halt means  104  may be replaced by an instruction execution continuation means and, when a condition is satisfied, the instruction execution continuation means may output an instruction execution signal to the instruction execution means  103  so that the instruction execution means  103  executes instructions. The processor including the instruction execution halt means  104  and the processor including the instruction execution continuation means are effectively the same, only with inverse logic.  
       Embodiment 1  
       [141]    141. Among the six conditional transfer instructions shown in FIG. 31, the processor of Embodiment 1 decodes and executes conditional transfer instructions specifying one out of a pair of conditions in an exclusive relation and does not decode and execute conditional transfer instructions specifying the other of the pair of conditions. Here, examples of conditions in an exclusive relation are “a=b” and “a≠b”, and “a&gt;b” and “a≦b”.  
         [142]    142. More specifically, when two operation objects “a” and “b” are compared by a comparison instruction, the present processor decodes and executes a conditional instruction specifying one out of a pair of conditions that are ‘“a” and “b” are equal’ and ‘“a” and “b” are not equal’.  
         [143]    143. Similarly, the present processor decodes and executes a conditional instruction specifying one out of a pair of conditions that are ‘“a” is greater than “b”’ and ‘“a” is equal to or smaller than “b”’, and decodes and executes a conditional instruction specifying one out of a pair of conditions that are ‘“a” is smaller than “b”’ and ‘“a” is equal to or greater than “b”’.  
         [144]    144.FIG. 2 shows a list of conditional transfer instructions which the present processor can execute. This list includes three types of conditional transfer instructions  201 . Each of the conditions  202  is a sign indicating the condition specified by one conditional transfer instruction. When two operation objects “a” and “b” are compared by a comparison instruction, the condition of the instruction “moveq”  203  is that “a” and “b” are equal; the condition of the instruction “movgt”  204  is that “a” is greater than “b”; and the condition of the instruction “movge”  205  is that “a” is equal to or greater than “b”. Each of these conditional transfer instructions executes transfer when its condition is satisfied.  
         [145]    145. The present compiler generates only the conditional transfer instructions shown in FIG. 2, out of the conditional transfer instructions shown in FIG. 31.  
         [146]    146.FIG. 3 is a flowchart showing the operation of the compiler of Embodiment 1.  
         [147]    147.FIGS. 4A and 4B show example C source programs which are written in C language and are input into the present compiler.  
         [148]    148. With the C source program shown in FIG. 4A, the variable “a” and the variable “b” are compared and, when they are equal, “1” is assigned to the variable “c”; when they are not equal, “0” is assigned to the variable “c” and the function “f” is called.  
         [149]    149. With the C source program shown in FIG. 4B, the variable “a” and the variable “b” are compared and, when they are not equal, “1” is assigned to the variable “c”; when they are equal, “0” is assigned to the variable “c”; and the function “f” is called.  
         [150]    150.FIGS. 5A and 5B show intermediate code sequences which do not include conditional transfer instructions and are respectively generated from the C source programs shown in FIG. 4A and 4B in step S 301  of the flowchart shown in FIG. 3. Note that FIGS. 5A and 5B show the same intermediate code sequences as those generated by a conventional compiler during the conversion of the C source programs shown in FIGS. 4A and 4B into machine instructions.  
         [151]    151. In FIG. 5A, the intermediate code  501  is a code for comparing the variables “a” and “b” and setting a flag to indicate the comparison result; the intermediate code  502  is a code for branching to the label “Lt”  507  when the variables “a” and “b” are equal; the intermediate code  503  is a code for transferring the immediate “0” to the variable “c”; the intermediate code  504  is a code for branching to the label “L”  508 ; the intermediate code  505  is a code for transferring the immediate “1” to the variable “c”; and the intermediate code  506  is a code for calling the function “f”.  
         [152]    152. In FIG. 5B, the intermediate code  511  is a code for comparing the variables “a” and “b” and setting a flag to indicate the comparison result; the intermediate code  512  is a code for branching to the label “Lt”  517  when the variables “a” and “b” are not equal; the intermediate code  513  is a code for transferring the immediate “0” to the variable “c”; the intermediate code  514  is a code for branching to the label “L”  518 ; the intermediate code  515  is a code for transferring the immediate “1” to the variable “c”; and the intermediate code  516  is a code for calling the function “f”.  
         [153]    153.FIGS. 6A and 6B show intermediate code sequences including conditional transfer instructions. These intermediate code sequences are respectively generated by the present compiler from the intermediate code sequences not including conditional transfer instructions shown in FIGS. 5A and 5B in steps S 302 -S 118  of the flowchart shown in FIG. 3.  
         [154]    154. In FIG. 6A, the intermediate code  601  is a code for comparing the variables “a” and “b” and setting a flag to indicate the comparison result; the intermediate code  602  is a code for transferring the immediate “0” to the variable “c”; the intermediate code  603  is a code for transferring the immediate “1” to the variable “c” when the variables “a” and “b” are equal; and the intermediate code  604  is a code for calling the function “f”.  
         [155]    155. In FIG. 6B, the intermediate code  611  is a code for comparing the variables “a” and “b” and setting a flag to indicate the comparison result; the intermediate code  612  is a code for transferring the immediate “1” to the variable “c”; the intermediate code  613  is a code for transferring the immediate “0” to the variable “c” when the variables “a” and “b” are equal; and the intermediate code  614  is a code for calling the function “f”.  
         [156]    156.FIGS. 7A and 7B show machine instruction sequences. The machine instruction sequences are respectively generated by the present compiler from the intermediate code sequences including conditional transfer instructions shown in FIGS. 6A and 6B in step S 319  of the flowchart shown in FIG. 3. Note that the machine instruction sequences shown in FIGS. 7A and 7B are respectively the same as those generated from intermediate code sequences including conditional transfer instructions shown in FIGS.  6 A and  6 B.  
         [157]    157. In FIG. 7A, the machine instruction  701  is an instruction for comparing the values of registers “r0” and “r1” and setting a flag to indicate the comparison result; the machine instruction  702  is an instruction for transferring the immediate “0” to the register “r2”; the machine instruction  703  is an instruction for transferring the immediate “1” to the register “r2” when the values of the registers “r0” and “r1” are equal; and the machine instruction  704  is an instruction for calling the function “f”.  
         [158]    158. In FIG. 7B, the machine instruction  711  is an instruction for comparing the values of registers “r0” and “r1” and setting a flag to indicate the comparison result; the machine instruction  712  is an instruction for transferring the immediate “1” to the register “r2”; the machine instruction  713  is an instruction for transferring the immediate “0” to the register “r2” when the values of the registers “r0” and “r1” are equal; and the machine instruction  714  is an instruction for calling the function “f”.  
         [159]    159. The following is a description of the process in the case where the C source program shown in FIG. 4A is input into the present compiler, with reference to FIG. 3.  
         [160]    160. (1a) The input C source program is converted into an intermediate code sequence without a conditional transfer instruction and the initial value “1” is assigned to the variable n (step S 301 ). In this example, the C source program shown in FIG. 4A is converted into the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 5A.  
         [161]    161. (2a) The compiler judges whether the n th  intermediate code is an intermediate code indicating a conditional branch whose branch destination is the n+3 th  code (step S 302 ). This process is repeated by incrementing n by one until the judgement result becomes Yes (in this repetition, the judgement result in step S 302  is No, the process proceeds to step S 314 , and the result in step S 318  is Yes). In this example, the intermediate code  502  shown in FIG. 5A indicates a conditional branch whose branch destination is the n+3 th  code, so that the judgement result in step S 302  becomes Yes when n is 2 and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 303 .  
         [162]    162. (3a) The compiler judges whether the n+1 th  intermediate code indicates a transfer (step S 303 ). When the judgement result is No, n is incremented by one and the process returns to step S 302  to find an intermediate code indicating a conditional branch (in this case, the judgement result in step S 303  is No, the process proceeds to step S 314 , and the judgement result in step S 318  is Yes). In this example, the intermediate code  503  shown in FIG. 5A is an intermediate code indicating a transfer, so that the judgement result in step S 303  becomes Yes when n+1 is 3 and the process proceeds to step S 304 .  
         [163]    163. (4a) The compiler judges whether the n+2 th  intermediate code is an intermediate code indicating an unconditional branch whose branch destination is the n+4 th  code (step S 304 ). When the judgement result is No, n is incremented by 2 and the process returns to step S 302  to find an intermediate code indicating a conditional branch (in this case, the judgement result in step S 304  is No, the process proceeds to step S 315 , and the judgement result in step S 318  is Yes). In this example, the intermediate code  504  shown in FIG. 5A indicates an unconditional branch whose branch destination is the n+4 th  code so that, when n+2 is 4, the judgement result in step S 304  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to step S 304 .  
         [164]    164. (5a) The compiler judges whether the n+3 th  intermediate code and the n+1 th  intermediate code indicate transfers to the same variable (step S 305 ). When the judgement result is No, n is incremented by 3 and the process returns to step S 302  to find an intermediate code indicating a conditional branch (in this case, the judgement result in step S 305  is No, the process proceeds to step S 316 , and the judgement result in step S 318  is Yes). In this example, the intermediate code  505  shown in FIG. 5A indicates a transfer to the same variable as the intermediate code  503 . Therefore, when n+3 is 5, the judgement result in step S 305  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to step S 306 .  
         [165]    165. (6a) The compiler judges whether the present processor can execute a conditional transfer instruction specifying the same condition as that specified by the n th  intermediate code indicating a conditional branch (step S 306 ). In this example, the condition specified by the intermediate code  502  indicating a conditional branch shown in FIG. 5A is that “a” and “b” are equal. As shown in FIG. 2, the present processor can execute a conditional transfer instruction specifying the same condition, so that the judgement result becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the conversion process in step S 307 .  
         [166]    166. (7a) The n th  intermediate code indicating a conditional branch is deleted (step S 307 ).  
         [167]    167. (8a) The n+2 th  intermediate code indicating an unconditional branch is deleted (step S 308 ).  
         [168]    168. (9a) The n+3 th  intermediate code indicating a transfer is converted into a conditional transfer instruction specifying the same condition as that specified by the n th  intermediate code indicating a conditional branch (step S 309 ).  
         [169]    169. (10a) N is incremented by 4 and the compiler judges whether there is any other intermediate code to be processed (steps S 317  and S 318 ). If so, the process in steps S 302 - 318  is repeated. In this example, the intermediate code sequence including a conditional transfer instruction shown in FIG. 6A is generated.  
         [170]    170. (11a) An intermediate code sequence including conditional transfer instructions is inverted into a machine instruction sequence (step S 319 ). In this example, the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 6A is converted into the machine instruction sequence shown in FIG. 7A.  
         [171]    171. The following description concerns the process in the case where the C source program shown in FIG. 4B is input into the present compiler.  
         [172]    172. (1b) In step S 301 , the C source program shown in FIG. 4B is converted into the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 5B.  
         [173]    173. (2b) The intermediate code  512  shown in FIG. 5B indicates a conditional branch whose branch destination is the n+3 th  intermediate code. Therefore, when n is 2, the judgement result in step S 302  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to step S 303 .  
         [174]    174. (3b) The intermediate code  513  shown in FIG. 5B indicates a transfer so that, when n+1 is 3, the judgement result in step S 303  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 304 .  
         [175]    175. (4b) The intermediate code  514  shown in FIG. 5B indicates an unconditional branch whose branch destination is the n+4 th  intermediate code. Therefore, when n+2 is 4, the judgement result in step S 304  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 304 .  
         [176]    176. (5b) The intermediate code  515  shown in FIG. 5B indicates a transfer to the same variable as intermediate code  513 . Therefore, when n+3 is 5, the judgement result in step S 305  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to step S 306 .  
         [177]    177. (6b) The condition specified by the intermediate code  512  indicating a conditional branch shown in FIG. 5B is that “a” and “b” are not equal. As shown in FIG. 5B, the present processor cannot execute a conditional transfer instruction specifying the same condition, so that the judgement result in step S 306  is No and the process proceeds to the conversion process in step S 310 .  
         [178]    178. (7b) The n th  intermediate code indicating a conditional branch is deleted (step S 310 ).  
         [179]    179. (8b) The n+2 intermediate code indicating an unconditional branch is deleted (step S 311 ).  
         [180]    180. (9b) The n+1 th  intermediate code indicating a transfer is converted into a conditional transfer instruction specifying an exclusive condition for the condition specified by the n th  intermediate code indicating a conditional branch (step S 312 ).  
         [181]    181. (10b) The n+3 th  transfer code and the n+1 th  transfer code are interchanged.  
         [182]    182. (11b) N is incremented by 4 and the compiler judges whether there is any other intermediate code to be processed (steps S 317  and S 318 ). If so, the process in steps S 302 - 318  is repeated. In this example, the intermediate code sequence including a conditional transfer instruction shown in FIG. 6B is generated.  
         [183]    183. (12b) In step S 319 , the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 6B is converted into the machine instruction sequence shown in FIG. 7B.  
         [184]    184. In this manner, the present compiler generates only conditional transfer instructions which the present processor can execute.  
       Embodiment 2  
       [185]    185.FIG. 8 is a flowchart showing the operation of the compiler of the present embodiment.  
         [186]    186.FIG. 9 shows an intermediate code sequence including a conditional transfer instruction. This intermediate code sequence is generated by the present compiler from the C source program shown in FIG. 4B in step S 801  of the flowchart shown in FIG. 8. Note that FIG. 9 shows the same intermediate code sequence as that generated by a conventional compiler for generating conditional transfer instruction during the conversion of the C source program shown in FIG. 4B into machine instructions.  
         [187]    187. In FIG. 9, the intermediate code  901  is a code for comparing the variables “a” and “b” and setting a flag to indicate the comparison result; the intermediate code  902  is a code for transferring the immediate “0” to the variable “c”; the intermediate code  903  is a code for transferring the immediate “1” to the variable “c” when the variables “a” and “b” are not equal; and the intermediate code  904  is a code for calling the function “f”.  
         [188]    188. Here, the processor of the present embodiment can execute the conditional transfer instructions shown in FIG. 2, as the processor of Embodiment 1.  
         [189]    189. The following description concerns the process in the case where the C source program shown in FIG. 4B is input into the present processor, with reference to figures such as FIG. 8.  
         [190]    190. It should be noted here that each step shown in FIG. 8 that has the same number as a step in FIG. 3 executes the same process as before.  
         [191]    191. (1) The input C source program is converted into an intermediate code sequence including a conditional transfer instruction, and the initial value “1” is assigned to the variable n (step S 801 ). In this example, the C source program shown in FIG. 4B is converted into the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 9.  
         [192]    192. (2) The compiler judges whether the n th  intermediate code indicates a conditional transfer (step S 802 ). This process is repeated by incrementing n by one until the judgement result becomes “Yes” (in this repetition, the judgement result in step S 802  is No, the process proceeds to step S 807 , and the judgement result in step S 808  is Yes). In this example, the intermediate code  903  shown in FIG. 9 indicates a conditional transfer, so that the judgement result in step S 802  becomes Yes when n is 3 and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 803 .  
         [193]    193. (3) The compiler judges whether the present processor can execute the n th  conditional transfer code (step S 803 ). Here, the condition specified by the intermediate code  903  indicating a conditional transfer is that “a” and “b” are not equal. As shown in FIG. 2, the present processor cannot execute a conditional branch instruction specifying this condition. Therefore, the judgement result in this step is No and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 804 .  
         [194]    194. (4) The compiler judges whether the n−2th intermediate code indicates a comparison (step S 804 ). When the judgement result is No, the process proceeds to the inverse conversion process in step S 810 ; when Yes, the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 805 . In this example, the intermediate code  901  shown in FIG. 9 indicates a comparison, so that when n−2 is 1, the judgement result in step S 804  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to step S 805 .  
         [195]    195. (5) The compiler judges whether the n−1th intermediate code indicates a transfer to the same variable as the n th  intermediate code indicating a conditional transfer (step S 805 ). When the judgement result is No, the process proceeds to the deletion process of conditional transfer instructions in step S 810 ; when Yes, the process proceeds to the conversion process in step S 805 . In this example, the intermediate code  902  shown in FIG. 9 indicates a transfer to the same variable as the intermediate code  903  indicating a conditional transfer. Therefore, when n−1 is 3, the judgement result in step S 805  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the conversion process in step S 806 .  
         [196]    196. (6) The condition of the nth intermediate code indicating a conditional transfer is changed to an exclusive condition and the transfer values of the n−1th and n th  intermediate codes are interchanged (step S 806 ). In this example, the condition specified by the intermediate code  903  indicating a conditional branch shown in FIG. 9, that is “a” and “b” are not equal (≠), is changed to an exclusive condition (equal =). That is, “c=:ne 1” is changed to “c=: eq 1”.  
         [197]    197. (7) N is incremented by 1 and the compiler judges whether there is any other intermediate instruction to be processed (steps S 807  and S 808 ). If so, the process in steps S 802 -S 808  is repeated. In this example, the intermediate code sequence including a conditional transfer instruction shown in FIG. 6B is generated.  
         [198]    198. (8) In step S 319 , the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 6B is converted into the machine instruction sequence shown in FIG. 7B.  
         [199]    199. (9) Each conditional transfer instruction which cannot be executed by the present processor and also cannot be converted in the conversion process in step S 806  is inversely converted to an original intermediate code (step S 810 ). In this example, this process is not performed.  
         [200]    200. As described above, the present compiler converts unexecutable conditional transfer instructions into executable conditional transfer instructions for the present processor.  
       Embodiment 3  
       [201]    201. The processor of the present embodiment decodes and executes only conditional branch instructions specifying one out of a pair of conditions in an exclusive relation, out of the six types of conditional branch instructions specifying the same conditions as those specified by the six types of conditional transfer instructions  3101  shown in FIG. 31.  
         [202]    202.FIG. 10 shows a list of example conditional branch instructions which the present processor can execute. This list includes three types of conditional branch instructions  1001 . Each of the conditions  1002  is a sign indicating a condition specified by one conditional branch instruction. When two operation objects “a” and “b” are compared by a comparison instruction, the condition of the “beq”  1003  is that “a” and “b” are equal; that of the “bgt”  1004  is that “a” is greater than “b”; and that of the “bge”  1005  is that “a” is greater than or equal to “b”. Each conditional branch instruction indicates a branch which is performed when its condition is satisfied. Note that in this embodiment, the present processor cannot execute other conditional instructions.  
         [203]    203.FIG. 11 is a flowchart showing the operation of the compiler of Embodiment 3.  
         [204]    204.FIG. 12 shows an intermediate code sequence which the present processor can decode. This intermediate code sequence is generated by the present compiler from the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 5B, which the present processor cannot decode, in steps S 302 - 318  of the flowchart shown in FIG. 11.  
         [205]    205. In FIG. 12, the intermediate code  1201  is a code for comparing the variables “a” and “b” and setting a flag to indicate the comparison result; the intermediate code  1202  is a code for branching to the label “Lt”  1207  when the variables “a” and “b” are equal; the intermediate code  1203  is a code for transferring the immediate “1” to the variable “c”; the intermediate code  1204  is a code for branching to the label “L”  1208 ; the intermediate code  1205  is a code for transferring the immediate “0” to the variable “c”; and the intermediate code  1206  is a code for calling the function “f”.  
         [206]    206.FIG. 13 shows a machine instruction sequence. This machine instruction sequence is generated by the present compiler from the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 12 which the present processor can decode in step S 319  of the flowchart shown in FIG. 11. Note that FIG. 13 shows the same machine instruction sequence as that generated by a conventional compiler from the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 12.  
         [207]    207. In FIG. 13, the machine instruction  1301  is an instruction for comparing values of the registers “r0” and “r1” and setting a flag to indicate the comparison result; the machine instruction  1302  is an instruction for branching to the label “Lt”  1307  when the values of the registers “r0” and “r1” are equal; the machine instruction  1303  is an instruction for transferring the immediate “1” to the register “r2”; the machine instruction  1304  is an instruction for branching to the label “L”  1308 ; the machine instruction  1305  is an instruction for transferring the immediate “0” to the register “r2”; and the machine instruction  1306  is an instruction for calling the function “f”.  
         [208]    208. The following is a description of the processing of the present compiler to which the C source program shown in FIG. 4B is input, with reference to FIG. 11.  
         [209]    209. Note that each step shown in FIG. 11 that has the same number as a step in FIG. 13 executes the same processing as before.  
         [210]    210. (1) In step S 301 , the C source program shown in FIG. 4B is converted into the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 5B.  
         [211]    211. (2) The intermediate code  512  shown in FIG. 5B indicates a conditional branch whose branch destination is the n+3 th  intermediate code. Therefore, when n is 2, the judgement result in step S 302  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to step S 303 .  
         [212]    212. (3) The intermediate code  513  shown in FIG. 5B indicates a transfer so that, when n+1 is 3, the judgement result in step S 303  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 304 .  
         [213]    213. (4) The intermediate code  514  shown in FIG. 5B indicates an unconditional branch whose branch destination is the n+4 th  intermediate code. Therefore, when n+2 is 4, the judgement result in step S 304  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 304 .  
         [214]    214. (5) The intermediate code  515  shown in FIG. 5B indicates a transfer to the same variable as intermediate code  513 . Therefore, when n+3 is 5, the judgement result in step S 305  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to step S 306 .  
         [215]    215. ( 6 ) The compiler judges whether the present processor can execute a conditional branch instruction of the same condition as that specified by the n th  intermediate code indicating a conditional branch. When the judgement result is Yes, the conversion processing is not performed; when No, the process proceeds to the conversion processing (step S 1101 ). In this example, the condition specified by the intermediate code  512  indicating a conditional branch shown in FIG. 5B is that “a” and “b” are not equal. As can be seen from FIG. 10, the present processor cannot execute a conditional branch instruction specifying this condition, so that the judgement result becomes No and the process proceeds to the conversion processing in step S 1102 .  
         [216]    216. (7) The condition specified by the n th  intermediate code indicating a conditional branch is changed into an exclusive condition (step S 1102 ). In this example, the condition specified by the intermediate code  512  indicating a conditional branch, that is “a” and “b” are not equal (≠), is changed into an exclusive condition, that is “a” and “b” are equal (=). More specifically, “bne” is changed into “beq”.  
         [217]    217. (8) The n+3 th  transfer code and the n+1 th  transfer code are interchanged (step S 1103 ). In this example, the fifth transfer code “c=0” and the third transfer code “c=1” are interchanged.  
         [218]    218. (9) In steps S 317  and S 318 , the present compiler generates the executable intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 12 for the present processor.  
         [219]    219. (10) In step S 319 , the present compiler converts the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 12 into the machine instruction sequence shown in FIG. 13.  
         [220]    220. As described above, the present compiler converts unexecutable conditional branch instructions into executable conditional branch instructions for the present processor.  
       Embodiment 4  
       [221]    221.FIG. 14 shows comparison instructions, a conditional addition instruction, a conditional transfer instruction, and a conditional branch instruction, where the number of types of instructions has been reduced. These instructions are used in the present embodiment.  
         [222]    222. In FIG. 14, each of the conditional instructions and the conditional branch instruction uses only one condition where a conditional flag is set. Therefore, FIG. 14 shows one type of conditional addition instruction, one type of conditional transfer instruction, one type of conditional branch instruction, and ten types of comparison instructions for setting and resetting the conditional flag.  
         [223]    223. Therefore, the total number of instructions including the comparison instructions, the conditional instructions for two operations, and the conditional branch instruction is thirteen. Here, if the number of types of operations of conditional instructions is assumed to be A, the total number of types of instructions including comparison instructions, conditional instructions for each operation, and the conditional branch instruction is represented as 11+A.  
         [224]    224. Here, each total number of types of instructions including comparison instructions, conditional addition instructions, conditional transfer instructions, and conditional branch instructions in FIGS. 14, 32, and  33  is compared. When the number of types of conditional instructions A is 0-3, the total number of instruction types shown in FIG. 33 is the lowest. When the number of types of conditional instructions A is 4, the total number of instruction types shown in FIGS. 14 and 33 is fifteen, which is the lowest (in this case, the total number of instruction types shown in FIG. 32 is 51). When the total number of types of conditional instructions A is 5 or more, the total number of instruction types shown in FIG. 14 is the lowest. As A increases, the difference between these figures widens.  
         [225]    225. The processor of the present embodiment decodes and executes the comparison instructions, the conditional addition instruction, the conditional transfer instruction, and the conditional branch instruction shown in FIG. 14.  
         [226]    226.FIG. 15 shows the construction of the present compiler.  
         [227]    227. The present compiler includes the intermediate code generation means  1501 , the object code detection means  1502 , the conditional instruction conversion means  1503 , the intermediate code optimization means  1504 , and the machine instruction generation means  1505 .  
         [228]    228.FIG. 16 shows an example of the C source code  1511 . This C source code is written in C language and is input into the present compiler. The C source program shown in FIG. 16 is the same as that shown in FIG. 4A and therefore is not described here.  
         [229]    229. The intermediate code generation means  1501  converts the C source code  1511  and generates the first intermediate code  1512 . This conversion is the same as that performed by a conventional compiler and therefore is not described.  
         [230]    230.FIG. 17 shows the first intermediate code  1512 . The first intermediate code  1512  shown in FIG. 17 is the same as that shown in FIG. 5A and therefore is not described here.  
         [231]    231. In this embodiment, the present compiler generates the first intermediate code  1512  shown in FIG. 17 from the C source code  1511  shown in FIG. 16.  
         [232]    232. The object code detection means  1502  detects instruction sequences whose predetermined operations are executed when their predetermined conditions are satisfied.  
         [233]    233. The conditional instruction conversion means  1503  converts a sequence of instructions detected by the object code detection means  1502  into conditional instructions and generates the second intermediate code  1513  from the first intermediate code  1512 . The object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  are described in more detail later.  
         [234]    234.FIG. 18 shows the second intermediate code  1513 .  
         [235]    235. In FIG. 18, the intermediate code “a cmpeq b”  1801  is a conditional comparison code for comparing the variables “a” and “b”. When the variables are equal, an operation flag is set, and when the variables are not equal, the operation flag is reset. The intermediate code “c=0”  1802  is a code for transferring the immediate “0” to the variable “c”. The intermediate code “c=:true 1”  1803  is a code which is executed when its condition is satisfied. With this intermediate code  1803 , the immediate “1” is transferred to the variable “c”, only when the condition included in the preceding comparison code is satisfied (when the operation flag is set). The intermediate code  1304  is a code for calling the function “f”.  
         [236]    236. In this embodiment, the present compiler generates the second intermediate code  1513  shown in FIG. 18 from the first intermediate code  1512  shown in FIG. 17.  
         [237]    237. The intermediate code optimization means  1504  optimizes the second intermediate code  1513  and generates the intermediate code  1514 . This optimization is the same as that performed by a conventional compiler and therefore is not described here.  
         [238]    238. In this embodiment, when receiving the second intermediate code  1513  shown in FIG. 18, the intermediate code optimization means  1504  does not perform the optimization processing. This is because the input second intermediate code does not include codes to be optimized. Therefore, the third intermediate code  1514  is the same as the second intermediate code  1513  shown in FIG. 18.  
         [239]    239. The machine instruction generation means  1505  converts the third intermediate code  1514  and generates the machine instruction  1515 . This conversion is the same as that performed by a conventional compiler and therefore is not described here.  
         [240]    240.FIG. 19 shows the machine instruction  1515 .  
         [241]    241. In FIG. 19, the machine instruction “cmpeq r0, r1”  1901  is a conditional comparison instruction for comparing values of the registers “r0” and “r1”. When the values are equal, the operation flag is set; when the values are not equal, the operation flag is reset. The machine instruction “mov 0, r2”  1902  is a transfer instruction for transferring the immediate “0” to the register “r2”. The machine instruction “movt 1, r2”  1903  is an instruction which is executed when its condition is satisfied. With this machine instruction  1903 , only when the condition is satisfied by the result of a comparison instruction (when the operation flag is set), the immediate “1” is transferred to the register “r2”. The machine instruction  1904  is an instruction for calling the function “f”.  
         [242]    242. In this embodiment, the present compiler generates the machine instruction  1515  shown in FIG. 19 from the third intermediate code  1514  shown in FIG. 18.  
         [243]    243.FIG. 20 is a flowchart showing the operation of the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  of the present compiler.  
         [244]    244. The following is a description of the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  of the present compiler to which the first intermediate code  1512  shown in FIG. 17 is input, with reference to FIG. 17.  
         [245]    245. (1) The first intermediate code is input into the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503 , and the initial value “1” is assigned to the variable n (step S 2001 ). In this example, the first intermediate code shown in FIG. 17 is obtained.  
         [246]    246. (2) The compiler judges whether the n th  intermediate code indicates a comparison (step S 2002 ). This process is repeated by incrementing n by one until the judgement result becomes “Yes” (in this repetition, the judgement result in step S 2002  is No, the process proceeds to step S 2011 , and the judgement result in step S 2016  is Yes). In this example, the 1st intermediate code of the first intermediate code indicates a comparison so that, when n is 1, the judgement result in step S 2002  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 2003 .  
         [247]    247. (3) The compiler judges whether the n+1 th  intermediate code indicates a conditional branch and whether its branch destination is the n+4 th  intermediate code (step S 2003 ). When the judgement result is No, n is incremented by one and the process returns to step S 2002  to find an intermediate code indicating a comparison (in this case, the judgement result in step S 2003  is No, the process proceeds to steps S 2011 , and the judgement result in S 2016  is Yes). In this example, the 2nd intermediate code shown in FIG. 17 indicates a conditional branch whose branch destination is the n+4 th  intermediate code. Therefore, when n+1 is 2, the judgement result in step S 2003  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 2004 .  
         [248]    248. (4) The compiler judges whether the n+2 th  intermediate code indicates a transfer (step S 2004 ). When the judgement result is No, n is incremented by 2 and the process returns to step S 2002  to find an intermediate code indicating a comparison (in this case, the judgement result in step S 2004  is No, the process proceeds to step S 2012 , and the judgement result in step S 2016  is Yes). In this example, the 3rd intermediate code shown in FIG. 17 indicates a transfer, so that when n+2 is 3, the judgement result in step S 2004  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 2005 .  
         [249]    249. (5) The compiler judges whether the n+3 th  intermediate code indicates an unconditional branch whose branch destination is the n+5 th  intermediate code (step S 2005 ). When the judgement result is No, n is incremented by 3 and the process returns to step S 2002  to find an intermediate code indicating a comparison (in this case, the judgement result in step S 2405  is No, the process proceeds to step S 2013 , and the judgement result in step S 2016  is Yes). In this example, the 4th intermediate code shown in FIG. 17 indicates an unconditional branch whose branch destination is the n+5th intermediate code. Therefore, when n+3 is 4, the judgement result in step S 2005  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 2006 .  
         [250]    250. (6) The compiler judges whether the n+4 th  intermediate code indicates a transfer to the same variable of the n+2 th  intermediate code (step S 2006 ). When the judgement result is No, n is increased by 4 and the process returns to step S 2002  to find an intermediate code indicating a comparison (in this case, the judgement result in step S 2006  is No, the process proceeds to step S 2014 , and the judgement result in step S 2016  is Yes). In this example, the 5th intermediate code indicates a transfer to the same variable as the 3rd intermediate code, so that when n+4 is 5, the judgement result in step S 2005  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the conversion process in step S 2006 .  
         [251]    251. (7) The n th  intermediate code indicating a comparison is changed into a conditional comparison code specifying the same condition as the n+1 intermediate code indicating a conditional branch (step S 2007 ).  
         [252]    252. (8) The n+1 intermediate code indicating a conditional branch is deleted (step S 2008 ).  
         [253]    253. (9) The n+3 th  intermediate code indicating an unconditional branch is deleted (step S 2009 ).  
         [254]    254. (10) The n+4 th  intermediate code indicating a transfer is changed into a code which is executed when its condition is satisfied (step S 2010 ).  
         [255]    255. (11) N is increased by 5 and the compiler judges whether there is any other intermediate code to be processed (steps S 2015  and S 2016 ). If so, the process in steps S 2002 -S 2016  is repeated. In this example, the second intermediate code sequence  1513  shown in FIG. 18 is generated.  
         [256]    256. (12) The conditional instruction conversion means  1503  outputs the second intermediate code (step S 2017 ).  
         [257]    257. In this manner, the present compiler generates conditional comparison codes and codes which are executed when their conditions are satisfied. The present processor can execute these codes.  
       Embodiment 5  
       [258]    258. The processor of Embodiment 5 decodes and executes the comparison instructions, the conditional addition instruction, the conditional transfer instruction, and the conditional branch instruction shown in FIG. 14, as the processor of Embodiment 4.  
         [259]    259. The present processor includes the same components as the processor of Embodiment 4 shown in FIG. 15.  
         [260]    260. The following description concerns only the differences between the present embodiment and Embodiment 4.  
         [261]    261.FIG. 21 shows the first intermediate code  1512 . The first intermediate code  1512  shown in FIG. 21 is the same as that shown in FIG. 6A and therefore is not described here.  
         [262]    262. The intermediate code generation means  1501  generates the first intermediate code  1512  shown in FIG. 21 from the C source code  1511  shown in FIG. 16. This conversion is the same as that performed by a conventional compiler for generating conditional transfer instructions and therefore is not described here.  
         [263]    263. The object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  generate the second intermediate code  1513  shown in FIG. 18 from the first intermediate code  1512  shown in FIG. 21.  
         [264]    264.FIG. 22 is a flowchart showing the operation of the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  of the present embodiment.  
         [265]    265. The following is a description of the processing of the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  of the present compiler to which the first intermediate code  1512  shown in FIG. 21 is input, with reference to FIG. 21.  
         [266]    266. (1) The first intermediate code is input into the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503 , and the initial value “1” is assigned to the variable n (step S 2201 ). In this example, the first intermediate code shown in FIG. 21 is obtained.  
         [267]    267. (2) The compiler judges whether the n th  intermediate code of the first intermediate code indicates a comparison (step S 2202 ). This process is repeated by incrementing n by one until the judgement result becomes “Yes” (in this repetition, the judgement result in step S 2202  is No, the process proceeds to steps S 2207 , and the judgement result in S 2210  is Yes). In this example, the 1st intermediate code of the first intermediate code indicates a comparison, so that when n is 1, the judgement result in step S 2202  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 2203 .  
         [268]    268. (3) The compiler judges whether the n+1 th  intermediate code indicates a transfer (step S 2203 ). When the judgement result is No, n is incremented by one and the process returns to step S 2202  to find an intermediate code indicating a comparison (in this case, the judgement result in step S 2203  is No, the process proceeds to step S 2207 , and the judgement result in S 2210  is Yes). In this example, the 2nd intermediate code shown in FIG. 21 indicates a transfer, so that when n+1 is 2, the judgement result in step S 2203  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 2204 .  
         [269]    269. (4) The compiler judges whether the n+2 th  intermediate code indicates a conditional transfer to the same variable as the n+1 th  intermediate code (step S 2204 ). When the judgement result is No, n is incremented by 2 and the process returns to step S 2202  to find an intermediate code indicating a comparison (in this case, the judgement result in step S 2204  is No, the process proceeds to step S 2208 , and the judgement result in S 2210  is Yes). In this example, the 3rd intermediate code shown in FIG. 21 indicates the conditional transfer to the same variable as the 2nd intermediate code. Therefore, when n+2 is 3, the judgement result in step S 2204  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the conversion process in step S 2205 .  
         [270]    270. (5) The n th  intermediate code indicating a comparison is converted into a conditional comparison code specifying a condition in the exclusive relation with that specified by the n+2 th  conditional transfer (step S 2205 ).  
         [271]    271. (6) The n+2 th  intermediate code indicating a conditional transfer is converted into a code which is executed when its condition is satisfied (step S 2206 ).  
         [272]    272. (7) N is incremented by 3 and the compiler judges whether there is any other intermediate code to be processed (steps S 2209  and S 2210 ). If so, the process in steps S 2202 -S 2210  is repeated. In this example, the second intermediate code  1513  shown in FIG. 18 is generated.  
         [273]    273. (8) The conditional instruction conversion means  1503  outputs the second intermediate code (step S 2211 ).  
         [274]    274. In this manner, the present compiler generates executable conditional comparison codes and codes which are executed when their conditions are satisfied for the present processor.  
       Embodiment 6  
       [275]    275. The processor of Embodiment 6 decodes and executes the comparison instructions, the conditional addition instruction, the conditional transfer instruction, and the conditional branch instruction shown in FIG. 14, as the processors of Embodiments 4 and 5.  
         [276]    276. The compiler of Embodiment 6 includes the same components as those of the processor of Embodiment 4 or Embodiment 5 shown in FIG. 15.  
         [277]    277. The following description concerns only the difference between the present embodiment and Embodiment 4.  
         [278]    278.FIG. 23 shows the first intermediate code  1512 .  
         [279]    279. In FIG. 23, the intermediate code  2301  is a code for comparing the variables “a” and “b” and setting a flag to indicate the comparison result; the intermediate code  2302  is a code for transferring the immediate “0” to the variable “c” when the variables “a” and “b” are not equal; the intermediate code  2303  is a code for transferring the immediate “1” to the variable “c” when the variables “a” and “b” are equal; and the intermediate code  2304  is a code for calling the function “f”.  
         [280]    280. The intermediate code generation means  1501  generates the first intermediate code  1512  shown in FIG. 23 from the C source code  1511  shown in FIG. 16. This conversion is the same as that performed by a conventional compiler for generating conditional transfer instructions and therefore is not described here.  
         [281]    281. The object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  generate the second intermediate code  1513  shown in FIG. 18 from the first intermediate code  1512  shown in FIG. 23.  
         [282]    282.FIG. 24 is a flowchart showing the operation of the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  of the present processor.  
         [283]    283. The following is a description of the processing of the intermediate code  1512  shown in FIG. 23 by the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503  of the present compiler.  
         [284]    284. (1) The first intermediate code is input into the object code detection means  1502  and the conditional instruction conversion means  1503 , and the initial value “1” is assigned to the variable n (step S 2401 ). In this example, the first intermediate code shown in FIG. 23 is obtained.  
         [285]    285. (2) The compiler judges whether the n th  intermediate code of the first intermediate code indicates a comparison (step S 2402 ). This process is repeated by incrementing n by one until the judgement result becomes Yes (in this repetition, the judgement result in step S 2402  is No, the process proceeds to step S 2409 , and the judgement result in S 2412  is Yes). In this example, the 1st intermediate code of the first intermediate code indicates a comparison, so that when n is 1, the judgement result in step S 2402  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 2403 .  
         [286]    286. (3) The compiler judges whether the n+1 th  intermediate code indicates a conditional transfer (step S 2403 ). When the judgement result is No, n is incremented by one and the process returns to step S 2402  to find an intermediate code indicating a comparison (in this case, the judgement result in step S 2403  is No, the process proceeds to step S 2409 , and the judgement result in S 2412  is Yes). In this example, the 2nd intermediate code shown in FIG. 23 indicates a conditional transfer, so that, when n+1 is 2, the judgement result in step S 2403  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the judgement in step S 2404 .  
         [287]    287. (4) The compiler judges whether the n+2 th  intermediate code indicates a conditional transfer to the same variable as the n+1 th  intermediate code (step S 2404 ). When the judgement result is No, n is incremented by 2 and the process returns to step S 2402  to find an intermediate code indicating a comparison (in this case, the judgement result in step S 2404  is No, the process proceeds to step S 2410 , and the judgement result in step S 2412  is Yes). In this example, the 3rd intermediate code shown in FIG. 23 indicates a conditional transfer to the same variable as the 2nd intermediate code. Therefore, when n+2 is 3, the judgement result in step S 2404  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to the conversion process in step S 2405 .  
         [288]    288. (5) The compiler judges whether the condition of the n+2 th  intermediate code indicating a conditional transfer is in an exclusive relation with the condition of the n+1 th  intermediate code indicating a conditional transfer (step S 2405 ). When the judgement result is No, n is incremented by 2 and the process returns to step S 2402  to find an intermediate code indicating a comparison (in this case, the judgement result in step S 2405  is No, the process proceeds to step S 2410 , and the judgement result in step S 2412  is Yes). In this example, the condition of the 3rd intermediate code indicating a conditional transfer is in the exclusive relation with the condition of the 2nd intermediate code indicating a conditional transfer. Therefore, when n+2 is 3, the judgement result in step S 2405  becomes Yes and the process proceeds to step S 2406 .  
         [289]    289. (6) The n th  intermediate code indicating a comparison is converted into a conditional comparison code specifying the same condition as the n+2 th  intermediate code indicating a conditional transfer (step S 2406 ).  
         [290]    290. (7) The n+1 th  intermediate code indicating a conditional transfer is converted into a transfer code (step S 2407 ).  
         [291]    291. (8) The n+2 th  intermediate code indicating a conditional transfer is converted into a code which is executed when its condition is satisfied (step S 2408 ).  
         [292]    292. (9) N is incremented by 3 and the compiler judges whether there is any other intermediate code to be processed (steps S 2411  and S 2412 ). If so, the process in steps S 2402 -S 2412  is repeated. In this example, the second intermediate code  1513  shown in FIG. 18 is generated.  
         [293]    293. In this manner, the present compiler generates conditional comparison codes and codes which are executed when their conditions are satisfied. The present processor can execute these generated codes.  
         [294]    294. The processor and compiler of the present invention has been described above by means of the embodiments, although it should be obvious that the present invention is not limited to the examples described above. Further variations are described below.  
         [295]    295. (1) The compiler of the present invention converts immediate code not including conditional transfer code and intermediate code including conditional transfer code which the processor of the present invention cannot execute into intermediate code including conditional transfer code which the processor of the present invention can execute. However, the compiler of the present invention may convert a machine instruction sequence not including conditional transfer instructions and a machine instruction sequence including conditional transfer instructions which the processor of the present invention cannot execute into a machine instruction sequence including conditional transfer instructions which the processor of the present invention can execute.  
         [296]    296. (2) In the above embodiments, immediates are transferred by transfer instructions. However, the contents of registers or memory may be transferred.  
         [297]    297. (3) In the above embodiments, transfer instructions are converted into conditional instructions and instructions which are executed when their conditions are satisfied. However, arithmetic logical instructions may be converted into these instructions. For instance, Embodiment 1 may be applied to addition instructions and an instruction sequence including conditional addition instructions may be generated.  
         [298]    298.FIG. 25 shows a list of conditional addition instructions which the processor of Embodiment 1 can execute. This list includes three types of conditional addition instructions, which is to say, the conditional addition instructions  2501 . The conditions  2502  are signs indicating conditions specified by respective conditional addition instructions. When two operation objects “a” and “b” are compared by a comparison instruction, the condition of the “addeq”  2503  is that “a” and “b” are equal; the condition of the “addgt”  2504  is that “a” is greater than “b”; and the condition of the “addge”  2505  is that “a” is greater than or equal to “b”. Each conditional addition instruction is executed when its condition is satisfied.  
         [299]    299.FIG. 26 shows an example C source program written in C language.  
         [300]    300.FIG. 27 shows an intermediate code sequence not including conditional addition instructions generated from the C source program shown in FIG. 26.  
         [301]    301.FIG. 28 shows an intermediate code sequence including a conditional addition instruction generated from the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 27.  
         [302]    302.FIG. 29 shows a machine instruction sequence generated from the intermediate code sequence shown in FIG. 28.  
         [303]    303. The compiler of this variation converts the program shown in FIG. 26 into the intermediate code shown in FIG. 27, into the intermediate code shown in FIG. 28, and into the instruction sequence including a conditional addition instruction shown in FIG. 29.  
         [304]    304. (4) In Embodiments 4-6, the conditions of conditional instructions and conditional branch instruction are that the conditional flag is set. However, the conditions may be that the conditional flag is reset.