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AMD AMD5K86 - System Management Mode (SMM)

AMD AMD5K86
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1
8524BjO-Mar1996
AMD~
AMD5~6
Processor
Technical
Reference
Manual
The
WBINVD
instruction
Asserting
AZOlVI
masks
Real-mode
cache
addresses
even
while
the
processor
does
not
control
the
bus.
Thus,
if
another
master
takes
control
of
the
bus
and
causes
the
assertion
of
AZOlVI,
this
masks
cache
accesses
occurring
concurrently
in
the
processor.
However,
it
does
not
affect
the
correct
execution
of
programs,
because
linear
and
physical
addresses
are
identical
in
Real
mode.
The
Pentium
processor
applies
masking
only
to
physical
addresses,
not
to
linear
addresses.
This
difference
between
the
AMD5
K
86
and
Pentium
processors
of
masking
linear
vs. physi-
cal
addresses
is
not
visible
to
software
because
linear
and
physical
addresses
are
identical
in
Real
mode,
and
the
AMD5
K
86
processor
samples
AZOlVI
only
in
Real
mode.
6.3
System
Management
Mode
(SMM)
SMM
is
an
operating
mode
entered
via
an
interrupt
and
per-
formed
by
an
interrupt
service
routine.
It
is
designed
for
power
management
and
other
system
control
activities
that
can
occur
transparently
to
conventional
operating
systems
like
DOS
and
Windows.
The
code
and
data
for
SMM
are
stored
in
an
SMM
memory
area
that
should
be
separate
from
main
memory.
The
processor
enters
SMM
when
system
logic
asserts
the
SMI
interrupt
and
the
processor
acknowledges
it
with
SMIACT,
at
which
point
the
processor
saves
its
state
and
jumps
to
the
SMM
service
routine.
The
processor
returns
from
SMM
when
it
exe-
cutes
the
RSM
(resume)
instruction
from
within
the
SMM ser-
vice
routine.
Upon
return,
the
processor
picks
up
where
it
left
off
in
its
prior
operating
mode,
except
that
special
return
options
are
provided
when
the
processor
enters
SMM
from
the
Halt
state
or
from
a
trapped
I/O
instruction,
as
described
in
the
sections
below.
The
sections
below
summarize
the
SMM
state-save
area,
entry
into
and
exit
from
SMM,
and
exceptions
and
interrupts
in
SMM.
Section
6.1.4
on
page
6-5
summarizes
memory
allocation
and
addressing
in
SMM.
The
SMI
and
SMIACT
signals
are
described
on
pages
5-117
and
5-122,
respectively.
System
Management
Mode
(SMM)
6-23

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