-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 98
IN — Input from Port
Opcode | Instruction | Op/ En | 64-Bit Mode | Compat/ Leg Mode | Description |
E4 ib | IN AL, imm8 | I | Valid | Valid | Input byte from imm8 I/O port address into AL. |
E5 ib | IN AX, imm8 | I | Valid | Valid | Input word from imm8 I/O port address into AX. |
E5 ib | IN EAX, imm8 | I | Valid | Valid | Input dword from imm8 I/O port address into EAX. |
EC | IN AL,DX | ZO | Valid | Valid | Input byte from I/O port in DX into AL. |
ED | IN AX,DX | ZO | Valid | Valid | Input word from I/O port in DX into AX. |
ED | IN EAX,DX | ZO | Valid | Valid | Input doubleword from I/O port in DX into EAX. |
Op/En | Operand 1 | Operand 2 | Operand 3 | Operand 4 |
I | imm8 | NA | NA | NA |
ZO | NA | NA | NA | NA |
Copies the value from the I/O port specified with the second operand (source operand) to the destination operand (first operand). The source operand can be a byte-immediate or the DX register; the destination operand can be register AL, AX, or EAX, depending on the size of the port being accessed (8, 16, or 32 bits, respectively). Using the DX register as a source operand allows I/O port addresses from 0 to 65,535 to be accessed; using a byte immediate allows I/O port addresses 0 to 255 to be accessed.
When accessing an 8-bit I/O port, the opcode determines the port size; when accessing a 16- and 32-bit I/O port, the operand-size attribute determines the port size. At the machine code level, I/O instructions are shorter when accessing 8-bit I/O ports. Here, the upper eight bits of the port address will be 0.
This instruction is only useful for accessing I/O ports located in the processor’s I/O address space. See Chapter 18, “Input/Output,” in the Intel® 64 and IA-32 Architectures Software Developer’s Manual, Volume 1, for more information on accessing I/O ports in the I/O address space.
This instruction’s operation is the same in non-64-bit modes and 64-bit mode.
IF ((PE = 1) and ((CPL > IOPL) or (VM = 1)))
THEN (* Protected mode with CPL > IOPL or virtual-8086 mode *)
IF (Any I/O Permission Bit for I/O port being accessed = 1)
THEN (* I/O operation is not allowed *)
#GP(0);
ELSE ( * I/O operation is allowed *)
DEST ← SRC; (* Read from selected I/O port *)
FI;
ELSE (Real Mode or Protected Mode with CPL ≤ IOPL *)
DEST ← SRC; (* Read from selected I/O port *)
FI;
None
#GP(0) If the CPL is greater than (has less privilege) the I/O privilege level (IOPL) and any of the corresponding I/O permission bits in TSS for the I/O port being accessed is 1.
#UD If the LOCK prefix is used.
#UD If the LOCK prefix is used.
#GP(0) If any of the I/O permission bits in the TSS for the I/O port being accessed is 1.
#PF(fault-code) If a page fault occurs.
#UD If the LOCK prefix is used.
Same exceptions as in protected mode.
#GP(0) If the CPL is greater than (has less privilege) the I/O privilege level (IOPL) and any of the corresponding I/O permission bits in TSS for the I/O port being accessed is 1.
#UD If the LOCK prefix is used.
Source: Intel® Architecture Software Developer's Manual (May 2018)
Generated: 5-6-2018