Design of TSC checkers for implementation in CMOS technology
Sandip Kundu, Sudhakar M. Reddy
ICCD 1989
A highly concurrent second-generation RISC (reduced-instruction-set computer) that combines a powerful RISC architecture with sophisticated hardware design techniques to achieve a short cycle time and a low cycles-per-instruction (CPI) ratio is described. Like earlier RISC processors, this design uses a register-oriented instruction set, the CPU is hardwired rather than microcoded, and it features a pipelined implementation. Unlike earlier RISC processors, however, several advanced architectural and implementation features are used, including separate instruction and data caches, zero-cycle branches, multiple-instruction dispatch, and simultaneous execution of fixed- and floating-point instructions. The CPU has a four-word data bus to main memory, a four-word instruction-fetch bus from the I-cache arrays, and a two-word data bus between the D-cache and floating-point unit. The CPU has a full 64-b floating-point engine, and thirty-two 64-b floating point registers in addition to thirty-two 32-b fixed-point registers. In a single cycle, four instructions can be executed simultaneously.
Sandip Kundu, Sudhakar M. Reddy
ICCD 1989
C.Leonard Berman
ICCD 1989
H.B. Bakoglu, G.F. Grohoski, et al.
COMPCON 1990
Shiwei Wang, Yarsun Hsu, et al.
ICCD 1989