Digital Systems and ApplicationsVojin G. Oklobdzija CRC Press, 2017. gada 19. dec. - 992 lappuses New design architectures in computer systems have surpassed industry expectations. Limits, which were once thought of as fundamental, have now been broken. Digital Systems and Applications details these innovations in systems design as well as cutting-edge applications that are emerging to take advantage of the fields increasingly sophisticated capabilities. This book features new chapters on parallelizing iterative heuristics, stream and wireless processors, and lightweight embedded systems. This fundamental text—
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1.–5. rezultāts no 63.
xix. lappuse
... Disk Subsystem Performance . Performance Evaluation: Techniques, Tools, and Benchmarks . Trace Caching and Trace Processors E-mailserver Proxy server Compute server Internet access Web server Ethernet I-1 SECTION I: Computer Systems and ...
... Disk Subsystem Performance . Performance Evaluation: Techniques, Tools, and Benchmarks . Trace Caching and Trace Processors E-mailserver Proxy server Compute server Internet access Web server Ethernet I-1 SECTION I: Computer Systems and ...
1-60. lappuse
... disk as a backup memory space. Many of today's machines generate 64-bit addresses, some even larger; most modern machines therefore reference 16 exabytes (16 giga-gigabytes) or more of data in their address space directly. The list goes ...
... disk as a backup memory space. Many of today's machines generate 64-bit addresses, some even larger; most modern machines therefore reference 16 exabytes (16 giga-gigabytes) or more of data in their address space directly. The list goes ...
1-61. lappuse
... disk are brought back in as soon as they are needed again. How is this done? The ultimate home for the process's address space is backing store, usually a disk drive; this is where the process's instructions and data come from and where ...
... disk are brought back in as soon as they are needed again. How is this done? The ultimate home for the process's address space is backing store, usually a disk drive; this is where the process's instructions and data come from and where ...
1-62. lappuse
... disk into main memory. This typically includes the first page of instructions in the program and possibly a small amount of data that the program needs at startup. Then, as more instructions or data are needed, the operating system ...
... disk into main memory. This typically includes the first page of instructions in the program and possibly a small amount of data that the program needs at startup. Then, as more instructions or data are needed, the operating system ...
1-63. lappuse
... disk (for example, the portions of the program that have not been used yet), some can be in main memory, and some can be in hardware caches. The operating system maintains a map for each address space so that, for every virtual page in ...
... disk (for example, the portions of the program that have not been used yet), some can be in main memory, and some can be in hardware caches. The operating system maintains a map for each address space so that, for every virtual page in ...
Saturs
1-1 | |
Chapter 2 System Design | 2-1 |
Chapter 3 Architectures for Low Power | 3-1 |
Chapter 4 Performance Evaluation | 4-1 |
Embedded Applications | 4-47 |
Chapter 5 Embedded SystemsonChips | 5-1 |
Chapter 6 Embedded Processor Applications | 6-1 |
Chapter 7 An Overview of SoC Buses | 7-1 |
Chapter 15 Circuits for HighPerformance IO | 15-1 |
Chapter 16 Algorithms and Data Structures in External Memory | 16-1 |
Chapter 17 Parallel IO Systems | 17-1 |
Chapter 18 A Read Channel for Magnetic Recording | 18-1 |
Operating System | 18-113 |
Chapter 19 Distributed Operating Systems | 19-1 |
New Directions in Computing | 19-15 |
A Strategically Programmable System | 20-1 |
Signal Processing | 7-17 |
Chapter 8 Digital Siganl Processing | 8-1 |
Chapter 9 DSP Applications | 9-1 |
Chapter 10 Digital Filter Design | 10-1 |
Chapter 11 Audio Siganl Processing | 11-1 |
Chapter 12 Digital Video Processing | 12-1 |
Chapter 13 LowPower Digital Signal Processing | 13-1 |
Communications and Networks | 13-19 |
Chapter 14 Communications and Computer Networks | 14-1 |
InputOutput | 14-19 |
Chapter 21 Reconfigurable Processors | 21-1 |
Chapter 22 Roles of Software Technology in Intelligent Transportation Systems | 22-1 |
Chapter 23 Media Signal Processing | 23-1 |
Chapter 24 Internet Architectures | 24-1 |
Chapter 25 Microelectronics for Home Entertainment | 25-1 |
Chapter 26 Mobile and Wireless Computing | 26-1 |
Chapter 27 Data Security | 27-1 |
Index | I-1 |
Back cover | I-21 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
addition algorithm allows applications approach architecture audio bits block branch buffer cache called channel clock communication complexity components core cycle decoder defined delay dependencies described detector devices disk drive effect efficient elements equalizer error example execution fetch field Figure filter frequency function given hardware implementation important increased input instruction interface issue logic loop mapping means measured memory method multiple noise operation optimization output packed parallel performance phase position possible prediction problem processing processor recording reduce referred rename response result sample sequence shift shown in Fig shows signal simple simulator single solution space specific structure subwords techniques threads typical unit
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