Cover image for The Microarchitecture of Pipelined and Superscalar Computers
The Microarchitecture of Pipelined and Superscalar Computers
Title:
The Microarchitecture of Pipelined and Superscalar Computers
ISBN:
9781475729894
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed. 1999.
Publication Information New:
New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 1999.
Physical Description:
XII, 266 p. online resource.
Contents:
1. Fundamentals of Pipelining -- 2. Timing and Control of Pipelines -- 3. High-Performance Memory Systems -- 4. Control Flow: Branching and Control Hazards -- 5. Data Flow: Detecting and Resolving Data Hazards -- 6. Vector Pipelines -- 7. Interrupts and Branch Mispredictions.
Abstract:
This book is intended to serve as a textbook for a second course in the im­ plementation (Le. microarchitecture) of computer architectures. The subject matter covered is the collection of techniques that are used to achieve the highest performance in single-processor machines; these techniques center the exploitation of low-level parallelism (temporal and spatial) in the processing of machine instructions. The target audience consists students in the final year of an undergraduate program or in the first year of a postgraduate program in computer science, computer engineering, or electrical engineering; professional computer designers will also also find the book useful as an introduction to the topics covered. Typically, the author has used the material presented here as the basis of a full-semester undergraduate course or a half-semester post­ graduate course, with the other half of the latter devoted to multiple-processor machines. The background assumed of the reader is a good first course in computer architecture and implementation - to the level in, say, Computer Organization and Design, by D. Patterson and H. Hennessy - and familiarity with digital-logic design. The book consists of eight chapters: The first chapter is an introduction to all of the main ideas that the following chapters cover in detail: the topics covered are the main forms of pipelining used in high-performance uniprocessors, a taxonomy of the space of pipelined processors, and performance issues. It is also intended that this chapter should be readable as a brief "stand-alone" survey.
Added Corporate Author:
Language:
English