Opcode | Instruction | Op/En | 64-Bit Mode | Compat/Leg Mode | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
F3 90 | PAUSE | NP | Valid | Valid | Gives hint to processor that improves performance of spin-wait loops. |
Op/En | Operand 1 | Operand 2 | Operand 3 | Operand 4 |
NP | NA | NA | NA | NA |
Improves the performance of spin-wait loops. When executing a “spin-wait loop,” processors will suffer a severe performance penalty when exiting the loop because it detects a possible memory order violation. The PAUSE instruction provides a hint to the processor that the code sequence is a spin-wait loop. The processor uses this hint to avoid the memory order violation in most situations, which greatly improves processor performance. For this reason, it is recommended that a PAUSE instruction be placed in all spin-wait loops.
An additional function of the PAUSE instruction is to reduce the power consumed by a processor while executing a spin loop. A processor can execute a spin-wait loop extremely quickly, causing the processor to consume a lot of power while it waits for the resource it is spinning on to become available. Inserting a pause instruction in a spin-wait loop greatly reduces the processor’s power consumption.
This instruction was introduced in the Pentium 4 processors, but is backward compatible with all IA-32 processors. In earlier IA-32 processors, the PAUSE instruction operates like a NOP instruction. The Pentium 4 and Intel Xeon processors implement the PAUSE instruction as a delay. The delay is finite and can be zero for some processors. This instruction does not change the architectural state of the processor (that is, it performs essentially a delaying no-op operation).
This instruction’s operation is the same in non-64-bit modes and 64-bit mode.
Execute_Next_Instruction(DELAY);
None.
#UD | If the LOCK prefix is used. |