What is a special purpose register?
What are the names of the special purpose registers, with a little description of each?
Special purposes register are, as the name implies, registers which are designed for just a task. For example, cs
, ds
, gs
and the other segment registers fall into the special purpose registers, because they exist to hold segments' number. eax
, ecx
etc are sgeneral purpose register because you can use them for everything without (almost) no limits. For example, you can't mov es, ds
, but you can mov eax, ebx
.
So, general purpose registers on the x86 are:
And special purpose register are:
I think they're all here, but if I forget one leave a comment ;)
BTW this might be a good resource (first non-wikipedia google's result for "special purpose register x86").
syscall
entry point address, and the mask value for RFLAGS. The saved GS value for swapgs
is another SPR. I think in 32-bit mode sysenter
also uses an MSR for the entry point address, instead of having to reload or cache it from the IDT like int 0x80
would.
Mar 17, 2018 at 7:59
From wikipedia - Processor register:
Special purpose registers ( SPR ) hold program state; they usually include the program counter (aka instruction pointer), stack pointer, and status register (aka processor status word). In embedded microprocessors, they can also correspond to specialized hardware elements.
General purpose registers (GPRs) can store both data and addresses, i.e., they are combined Data/Address registers.
I think with a little googling you could find tons of resources. But this is the short list for x86 processors:
CS: Code Segement
IP: Instruction Pointer
SS: Stack Segment
SP: Stack Pointer
There is more