21.6. Memory References

An Intel syntax indirect memory reference of the form

section:[base + index*scale + disp]

is translated into the AT&T syntax

section:disp(base, index, scale)

where base and index are the optional 32-bit base and index registers, disp is the optional displacement, and scale, taking the values 1, 2, 4, and 8, multiplies index to calculate the address of the operand. If no scale is specified, scale is taken to be 1. section specifies the optional section register for the memory operand, and may override the default section register (see a 80386 manual for section register defaults). Note that section overrides in AT&T syntax must be preceded by a %. If you specify a section override which coincides with the default section register, as does not output any section register override prefixes to assemble the given instruction. Thus, section overrides can be specified to emphasize which section register is used for a given memory operand.

Here are some examples of Intel and AT&T style memory references:

AT&T: -4(%ebp), Intel: [ebp - 4]

base is %ebp; disp is -4. section is missing, and the default section is used (%ss for addressing with %ebp as the base register). index, scale are both missing.

AT&T: foo(,%eax,4), Intel: [foo + eax*4]

index is %eax (scaled by a scale 4); disp is foo. All other fields are missing. The section register here defaults to %ds.

AT&T: foo(,1); Intel [foo]

This uses the value pointed to by foo as a memory operand. Note that base and index are both missing, but there is only one ,. This is a syntactic exception.

AT&T: %gs:foo; Intel gs:foo

This selects the contents of the variable foo with section register section being %gs.

Absolute (as opposed to PC relative) call and jump operands must be prefixed with *. If no * is specified, as always chooses PC relative addressing for jump/call labels.

Any instruction that has a memory operand, but no register operand, must specify its size (byte, word, long, or quadruple) with an instruction mnemonic suffix (b, w, l or q, respectively).

The x86-64 architecture adds an RIP (instruction pointer relative) addressing. This addressing mode is specified by using rip as a base register. Only constant offsets are valid. For example:

AT&T: 1234(%rip), Intel: [rip + 1234]

Points to the address 1234 bytes past the end of the current instruction.

AT&T: symbol(%rip), Intel: [rip + symbol]

Points to the symbol in RIP relative way, this is shorter than the default absolute addressing.

Other addressing modes remain unchanged in x86-64 architecture, except registers used are 64-bit instead of 32-bit.