A routine whose job is to set everything in the computer —
registers, memory, flags, everything — to zero, including that
portion of memory where it is running; its last act is to stomp on its own store zero
instruction. Death code
isn't very useful, but writing it is an interesting hacking challenge on
architectures where the instruction set makes it possible, such as the
PDP-8 (it has also been done on the DG Nova).
Perhaps the ultimate death code is on the TI 990 series, where all
registers are actually in RAM, and the instruction store immediate
0
has the opcode 0
. The PC will immediately wrap
around core as many times as it can until a user hits HALT. Any empty
memory location is death code. Worse, the manufacturer recommended use of
this instruction in startup code (which would be in ROM and therefore
survive).