In the x86 assembly language, the JMP instruction performs an unconditional jump. Such an instruction transfers the flow of execution by changing the instruction pointer register. There are a number of different opcodes that perform a jump; depending on whether the processor is in real mode or protected mode, and an override instruction is used, the instructions may take 16-bit, 32-bit, or segment:offset pointers.
There are many different forms of jumps: relative, conditional, absolute and register-indirect jumps.
JMP $ can be used to hang the computer. The $ is used to refer to the s...