Intel 253668-032US User Manual

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6-38   Vol. 3
INTERRUPT AND EXCEPTION HANDLING
Interrupt 8—Double Fault Exception (#DF)
Exception Class
Abort.
Description
Indicates that the processor detected a second exception while calling an exception 
handler for a prior exception. Normally, when the processor detects another excep-
tion while trying to call an exception handler, the two exceptions can be handled seri-
ally. If, however, the processor cannot handle them serially, it signals the double-fault 
exception. To determine when two faults need to be signalled as a double fault, the 
processor divides the exceptions into three classes: benign exceptions, contributory 
exceptions, and page faults (see Table 6-4).
 
Table 6-5 shows the various combinations of exception classes that cause a double 
fault to be generated. A double-fault exception falls in the abort class of exceptions. 
The program or task cannot be restarted or resumed. The double-fault handler can 
be used to collect diagnostic information about the state of the machine and/or, when 
possible, to shut the application and/or system down gracefully or restart the 
system.
Table 6-4.  Interrupt and Exception Classes  
Class
Vector Number
Description
Benign Exceptions and 
Interrupts
 1 
 2 
 3 
 4 
 5 
 6 
 7 
16 
17 
18
19 
All 
All
Debug 
NMI Interrupt 
Breakpoint 
Overflow 
BOUND Range Exceeded 
Invalid Opcode 
Device Not Available 
Coprocessor Segment Overrun 
Floating-Point Error 
Alignment Check 
Machine Check
SIMD floating-point 
INT n
 
INTR
Contributory Exceptions
 0 
10 
11 
12 
13
Divide Error 
Invalid TSS 
Segment Not Present 
Stack Fault 
General Protection
Page Faults
14
Page Fault