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VEX
From dankwiki
The Vector Extensions instruction encoding was introduced along with AVX in Sandy Bridge and Bulldozer processors. It makes use of C4 and C5 bytes to indicate a 3-byte or 2-byte, respectively, VEX prefix.
Prefix viz x86
The C4 and C5 bytes were traditionally used for LES (Load Extra Segment) and LDS (Load Data Segment) instructions. These are unavailable under x86's long mode, and thus C4/C5 clearly indicate VEX instructions in 64-bit programs. In 32-bit mode, the second byte is used to differentiate a LES/LDS from a VEX-encoded instruction. VEX is disabled in virtual-8086 or real mode, due to NTDVM's use of 0xC4+0xC0 as a trap instruction. Such are the costs of backwards compatibility.
General properties
- The majority of the SSE instruction sets through SSE5, including AES-NI, have VEX equivalents.
- Aside from explicitly aligned SSE load and store instructions, VEX does not require aligned memory operands
- This is different from SSE, where the vast majority of instructions require alignment
Sources
- "It's Vexed", Insanely Low-Level, 2009-11-17
- "Recent Intel AVX Architecture Changes", Intel Software Network, 2009-01-29
- "Intel Advanced Vector Extensions Programming Reference", Intel document 319433-009, December 2010
- "Stop the Instruction Set War", Agner Fog's CPU Blog, 2009-12-05