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Difference between revisions of "x86"

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Revision as of 01:35, 11 December 2017

x86 is a family of little-endian, variable-length, instruction set architectures and extensions. As its namesake indicates, the x86 ISA offers binary compatibility all the way from the original 8086 to modern microarchitectures as well as source code compatibility since the 8080. The x86 architecture is widely used in the desktop and server markets. Today, custom x86-based implementations are designed by a number of companies including Intel, AMD, VIA, Zhaoxin, DM&P, and RDC.

Generally speaking, the term 'x86' is most often used as an umbrella term encompassing the original x86-16, x86-32 (IA-32), x86-64 (AMD64), and the various extensions such as MMX, 3DNOW!, and SSE.

History

Main article: History of x86
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Overview

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Registers

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Operation Modes

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Instruction Set

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Syntaxes

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Interrupts

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Extensions

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Implementations

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See also


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1 octets
2 nibbles
2 octets
4 nibbles
4 octets
8 nibbles
8 octets
16 nibbles



Facts about "x86"
designVon Neumann +
designerIntel + and AMD +
dev modelProprietary +
endiannessLittle-endian +
first launched1978 +
formatRegister-Memory +
full page namex86 +
namex86 +
word size8 bit (1 octets, 2 nibbles) +, 16 bit (2 octets, 4 nibbles) +, 32 bit (4 octets, 8 nibbles) + and 64 bit (8 octets, 16 nibbles) +