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Home/ Questions/Q 9235811
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 18, 20262026-06-18T07:08:26+00:00 2026-06-18T07:08:26+00:00

According to Wikipedia the Intel ABI allows using EAX , ECX and EDX without

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According to Wikipedia the Intel ABI allows using EAX, ECX and EDX without preserving them in a function.
I am not sure what “Intel ABI” means. Does this mean it is enforced/followed by all compilers targeting Intel CPUs? I am writing an assembly function that will be called from C code. Can I assume this for all compilers? (I am only targeting x86 at the moment)

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-18T07:08:27+00:00Added an answer on June 18, 2026 at 7:08 am

    The Intel ABI is just a calling convention established by Intel.

    In general, how parameters are passed and which registers are saved or trashed during a function call is defined by the Calling convention of the function:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calling_convention

    In particular for __cdecl, __stdcall and __fastcall you should expect EAX, ECX and EDX to be trashed, and your function should preserve other registers and return on EAX (or EDX:EAX for 64-bit returns).

    If you don’t know what the calling convention that you should be using is, you shouldn’t be writing in assembly, since messing up the calling convention can lead to exploitable bugs in your application.

    In C, the default calling convention is normally __cdecl and for Windows exported APIs it is normally __stdcall.

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