User Guide
xx Preface
AMD64 Technology 24592—Rev. 3.15—November 2009
direct
Referencing a memory location whose address is included in the instruction’s syntax as an
immediate operand. The address may be an absolute or relative address. Compare indirect.
dirty data
Data held in the processor’s caches or internal buffers that is more recent than the copy held in
main memory.
displacement
A signed value that is added to the base of a segment (absolute addressing) or an instruction pointer
(relative addressing). Same as offset.
doubleword
Two words, or four bytes, or 32 bits.
double quadword
Eight words, or 16 bytes, or 128 bits. Also called octword.
DS:rSI
The contents of a memory location whose segment address is in the DS register and whose offset
relative to that segment is in the rSI register.
EFER.LME = 0
Notation indicating that the LME bit of the EFER register has a value of 0.
effective address size
The address size for the current instruction after accounting for the default address size and any
address-size override prefix.
effective operand size
The operand size for the current instruction after accounting for the default operand size and any
operand-size override prefix.
element
See vector.
exception
An abnormal condition that occurs as the result of executing an instruction. The processor’s
response to an exception depends on the type of the exception. For all exceptions except 128-bit
media SIMD floating-point exceptions and x87 floating-point exceptions, control is transferred to
the handler (or service routine) for that exception, as defined by the exception’s vector. For
floating-point exceptions defined by the IEEE 754 standard, there are both masked and unmasked
responses. When unmasked, the exception handler is called, and when masked, a default response
is provided instead of calling the handler.