Machine Check Architecture
Appearance
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2007) |
In computing, Machine Check Architecture (MCA) refers to a mechanism in which the CPU reports hardware errors to the operating system.
Intel's Pentium 4, Intel Xeon, P6 family processors as well as the Itanium architecture implement a machine check architecture that provides a mechanism for detecting and reporting hardware (machine) errors, such as: system bus errors, ECC errors, parity errors, cache errors, and translation lookaside buffer errors. It consists of a set of model-specific registers (MSRs) that are used to set up machine checking and additional banks of MSRs used for recording errors that are detected.[1]
See also
- Machine Check Exception (MCE)
- High availability
- Processor Abstraction Layer
- System Abstraction Layer
- Reliability, availability and serviceability (computer hardware)
References
External links
- Intel 64 and IA-32 Architectures Software Developer's Manuals
- Microsoft's article on Itanium's MCA
- A short description of x86 MCA
- Linux x86 daemon for processing of machine checks