semantic: 0.988 instruction: 0.945 graphic: 0.792 device: 0.739 other: 0.687 assembly: 0.675 vnc: 0.520 network: 0.458 boot: 0.413 socket: 0.407 mistranslation: 0.269 KVM: 0.247 x86 SSE/SSE2/SSE3 instruction semantic bugs with NaN Description of problem: The result of SSE/SSE2/SSE3 instructions with NaN is different from the CPU. From Intel manual Volume 1 Appendix D.4.2.2, they defined the behavior of such instructions with NaN. But I think QEMU did not implement this semantic exactly because the byte result is different. Steps to reproduce: 1. Compile this code ``` void main() { asm("mov rax, 0x000000007fffffff; push rax; mov rax, 0x00000000ffffffff; push rax; movdqu XMM1, [rsp];"); asm("mov rax, 0x2e711de7aa46af1a; push rax; mov rax, 0x7fffffff7fffffff; push rax; movdqu XMM2, [rsp];"); asm("addsubps xmm1, xmm2"); } ``` 2. Execute and compare the result with the CPU. This problem happens with other SSE/SSE2/SSE3 instructions specified in the manual, Volume 1 Appendix D.4.2.2. - CPU - xmm1[3] = 0xffffffff - QEMU - xmm1[3] = 0x7fffffff Additional information: This bug is discovered by research conducted by KAIST SoftSec.