학술논문

A 50 MIPS (peak) 32/64 b microprocessor
Document Type
Conference
Source
IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference, 1989 ISSCC. Digest of Technical Papers Solid-State Circuits Conference, 1989. Digest of Technical Papers. 36th ISSCC., 1989 IEEE International. :76-77 1989
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Microprocessors
Registers
Clocks
Pipelines
Delay
Circuit testing
Reduced instruction set computing
Hardware
CMOS process
Semiconductor device measurement
Language
Abstract
An RISC (reduced-instruction-set-computer) microprocessor is described that, subject to data dependencies, can issue one 32-b instruction every 20-ns cycle to achieve peak performance of 50 MIPS (million instructions per second) for worst-case process and operating conditions. The chip includes a 64-b by 32-b general-purpose register file, a 22-b by 32-b privileged-register file, a 1 kB eight-way-associative virtual instruction cache, a 2-kB direct-mapped write-through physical data cache, an 8-entry fully associative instruction address translation buffer, a 32-entry fully associative data address translation buffer, a 10-entry by 64-b output data FIFO, 3-entry by 64-b instruction input FIFO, a 2-entry by 64-b data input FIFO, hardware support for multiprocessing, and a heavily pipelined integer execution unit. Although the execution unit has a 32-b datapath, the data cache, external interface, and register file are organized by 64 b to maximize data transfer rates and to allow single-cache issue of all double-precision instructions. The chip is fabricated in a 1.5- mu m drawn n-well double-metal CMOS process. It contains 294353 transistors, of which 135680 are in the cache arrays, measures 14.5 mm*9.5 mm, and is mounted in a 224-pin surface-mount leaded chip carrier. Power dissipation is 9 W at a 20 ns cycle time.ETX

Online Access