Assembly Language for x86 Processors, 8th edition

Published by Pearson (July 29, 2019) © 2020

  • Kip R. Irvine Florida International University

eTextbook on Pearson+

ISBN-13: 9780135381649 (2019 update)

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Written specifically for 32- and 64-bit Intel/Windows platform, Assembly Language for x86 Processors establishes a complete and fully updated study of assembly language. The text teaches you to write and debug programs at the machine level, using effective design techniques that apply to multiple programming courses through top-down program design demonstration and explanation. This approach simplifies and demystifies concepts that you need to grasp before they can go on to more advanced computer architecture and operating systems courses.

The 8th Edition focuses on protected mode programming in Chapters 1 through 13. You can create 32-bit and 64-bit programs that run under the most recent versions of Microsoft Windows. The text uses the x86 and x86-64 processor types, explaining the differences between instruction operands and basic architecture differences.

  1. Basic Concepts
    • 1.1 Welcome to Assembly Language
    • 1.2 Virtual Machine Concept
    • 1.3 Data Representation
    • 1.4 Boolean Expressions
    • 1.5 Chapter Summary
    • 1.6 Key Terms
    • 1.7 Review Questions and Exercises
  2. x86 Processor Architecture
    • 2.1 General Concepts
    • 2.2 32-Bit x86 Processors
    • 2.3 64-Bit x86-64 Processors
    • 2.4 Components of a Typical x86 Computer
    • 2.5 Input-Output System
    • 2.6 Chapter Summary
    • 2.7 Key Terms
    • 2.8 Review Questions
  3. Assembly Language Fundamentals
    • 3.1 Basic Language Elements
    • 3.2 Example: Adding and Subtracting Integers
    • 3.3 Assembling, Linking, and Running Programs
    • 3.4 Defining Data
    • 3.5 Symbolic Constants
    • 3.6 64-Bit Programming
    • 3.7 Chapter Summary
    • 3.8 Key Terms
    • 3.9 Review Questions and Exercises
    • 3.10 Programming Exercises
  4. Data Transfers, Addressing, and Arithmetic
    • 4.1 Data Transfer Instructions
    • 4.2 Addition and Subtraction
    • 4.3 Data-Related Operators and Directives
    • 4.4 Indirect Addressing
    • 4.5 JMP and LOOP Instructions
    • 4.6 64-Bit Programming
    • 4.7 Chapter Summary
    • 4.8 Key Terms
    • 4.9 Review Questions and Exercises
    • 4.10 Programming Exercises
  5. Procedures
    • 5.1 Stack Operations
    • 5.2 Defining and Using Procedures
    • 5.3 Linking to an External Library
    • 5.4 The Irvine32 Library
    • 5.5 64-Bit Assembly Programming
    • 5.6 Chapter Summary
    • 5.7 Key Terms
    • 5.8 Review Questions and Exercises
    • 5.9 Programming Exercises
  6. Conditional Processing
    • 6.1 Boolean and Comparison Instructions
    • 6.2 Conditional Jumps
    • 6.3 Conditional Loop Instructions
    • 6.4 Conditional Structures
    • 6.5 Application: Finite-State Machines
    • 6.6 Conditional Control Flow Directives (Optional Topic)
    • 6.7 Chapter Summary
    • 6.8 Key Terms
    • 6.9 Review Questions and Exercises
    • 6.10 Programming Exercises
  7. Integer Arithmetic
    • 7.1 Shift and Rotate Instructions
    • 7.2 Shift and Rotate Applications
    • 7.3 Multiplication and Division Instructions
    • 7.4 Extended Addition and Subtraction
    • 7.5 ASCII and Unpacked Decimal Arithmetic
    • 7.6 Packed Decimal Arithmetic
    • 7.7 Chapter Summary
    • 7.8 Key Terms
    • 7.9 Review Questions and Exercises
    • 7.10 Programming Exercises
  8. Advanced Procedures
    • 8.1 Introduction
    • 8.2 Stack Frames
    • 8.3 Recursion
    • 8.4 INVOKE, ADDR, PROC, and PROTO
    • 8.5 Creating Multimodule Programs
    • 8.6 Advanced Use of Parameters (Optional Topic)
    • 8.7 Java Bytecodes (Optional Topic)
    • 8.8 Chapter Summary
    • 8.9 Key Terms
    • 8.10 Review Questions and Exercises
    • 8.11 Programming Exercises
  9. Strings and Arrays
    • 9.1 Introduction
    • 9.2 String Primitive Instructions
    • 9.3 Selected String Procedures
    • 9.4 Two-Dimensional Arrays
    • 9.5 Searching and Sorting Integer Arrays
    • 9.6 Java Bytecodes: String Processing (Optional Topic)
    • 9.7 Chapter Summary
    • 9.8 Key Terms and Instructions
    • 9.9 Review Questions and Exercises
    • 9.10 Programming Exercises
  10. Structures and Macros
    • 10.1 Structures
    • 10.2 Macros
    • 10.3 Conditional-Assembly Directives
    • 10.4 Defining Repeat Blocks
    • 10.5 Chapter Summary
    • 10.6 Key Terms
    • 10.7 Review Questions and Exercises
    • 10.8 Programming Exercises
  11. MS-Windows Programming
    • 11.1 Win32 Console Programming
    • 11.2 Writing a Graphical Windows Application
    • 11.3 Dynamic Memory Allocation
    • 11.4 32-bit x86 Memory Management
    • 11.5 Chapter Summary
    • 11.6 Key Terms
    • 11.7 Review Questions and Exercises
    • 11.8 Programming Exercises
  12. Floating-Point Processing and Instruction Encoding
    • 12.1 Floating-Point Binary Representation
    • 12.2 Floating-Point Unit
    • 12.3 x86 Instruction Encoding
    • 12.4 Chapter Summary
    • 12.5 Key Terms
    • 12.6 Review Questions and Exercises
    • 12.7 Programming Exercises
  13. High-Level Language Interface
    • 13.1 Introduction
    • 13.2 Inline Assembly Code
    • 13.3 Linking 32-Bit Assembly Language Code to C/C++
    • 13.4 Chapter Summary
    • 13.5 Key Terms
    • 13.6 Review Questions
    • 13.7 Programming Exercises
  14. 16-Bit MS-DOS Programming
    • 14.1 MS-DOS and the IBM-PC
    • 14.2 MS-DOS Function Calls (INT 21h)
    • 14.3 Standard MS-DOS File I/O Services
    • 14.4 Chapter Summary
    • 14.5 Programming Exercises 14.35
  15. Disk Fundamentals
    • 15.1 Disk Storage Systems
    • 15.2 File Systems
    • 15.3 Disk Directory
    • 15.4 Reading and Writing Disk Sectors
    • 15.5 System-Level File Functions
    • 15.6 Chapter Summary
    • 15.7 Programming Exercises
  16. BIOS-Level Programming
    • 16.2 Keyboard Input with INT 16h
    • 16.3 Video Programming with INT 10h
    • 16.4 Drawing Graphics Using INT 10h
    • 16.5 Memory-Mapped Graphics
    • 16.6 Mouse Programming
    • 16.7 Chapter Summary
    • 16.8 Programming Exercises

APPENDICES

    1. Appendix A: MASM Reference
    2. Appendix B: The x86 Instruction Set
    3. Appendix C: BIOS and MS-DOS Interrupts D.1
    4. Appendix D: Answers to Review Questions (Chapters 14-16) E.1

Appendices C and D are available on the Companion Website  

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