search for: d1540

Displaying 2 results from an estimated 2 matches for "d1540".

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2020 Jan 10
2
Register Dataflow Analysis on X86
...uot;<#1073741833>(d1513,b1526):u1522, u3208"<#1073741833>(d2481,b2486):u2484, u3695"<#1073741833>(d2477,b2486):, u3696"<#1073741833>(d2473,b2486):u2482] s1532: ADJCALLSTACKDOWN64 [d1533<RSP>!(+d3206,\~d3647",u1557):, d1534<EFLAGS>!(+d3206,d1540,):d1533, d1535<SSP>!(+d3206,\~d3646",u1558):d1534, u1536<RSP>!(+d3206):, u1537<SSP>!(+d3206):u1536] s1538: MOV32r0 [d1539<R12D>(+d3202,,):, d1540<EFLAGS>!(d1534,d1549,):, d1541<R12>(+d3202,,u3221):d1539] s1542: MOV32ri64 [d1543<RDX>(+d3206,\~...
2019 Dec 23
2
Register Dataflow Analysis on X86
Hi Scott, That #1073741833 is a register mask. They are treated as aggregate registers (essentially sets of registers), so if it includes R9D and R11D, it will be treated as being aliased with both. These separate defs are there because they reach disjoint registers. -- Krzysztof Parzyszek kparzysz at quicinc.com<mailto:kparzysz at quicinc.com> AI tools development From: Scott