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Mail Archives: djgpp/1997/07/30/18:01:36

Message-Id: <m0wtgcG-0003GaC@fwd05.btx.dtag.de>
Date: Wed, 30 Jul 97 23:49 MET DST
To: eldredge AT ap DOT net, djgpp AT delorie DOT com
References: <199707301851 DOT LAA11758 AT adit DOT ap DOT net>
Subject: Re: Intel Opcodes
MIME-Version: 1.0
From: Georg DOT Kolling AT t-online DOT de (Georg Kolling)

Nate Eldredge schrieb:
> You wrote:
> >Anyone wrote in an answer to my question (i'm sorry but i forgot the name
> >and i wrote this mail after i had deleted the answer) that there is an opcode
> >table with nasm. Well, i tried every file that looked a bit useful, but i
>  found
> >nothing!
> >I have NASM V.. Huh, can't find a version number!
> >Oh, the NASM/NDISASM files have date 8th april '97
> That was me. I have an old version that was laying around... it's 0.92 and
> is dated Jan 15 1997. The opcodes are in the file insns.dat. It's possible
> they've changed that, but I doubt they'd go to the trouble to rewrite the
> opcode table in some weird format. You *do* have the source distribution,
>  right?
>
> Oh, btw, GAS also has an opcode table, but it only covers 386 protected mode.
>
Somehow I get a feeling that I'm too stupid to find anything!
Perhaps in an INF file?

Now, to make it a little more detailed: I'm looking for a simple list of
opcodes, with a description what each one actually does (...or nop) and
with which processors it works (at least 386/486/Pentium, the more the better)



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