Computer Organization and Design, Revised Printing: The Hardware/Software InterfaceElsevier, 2007. gada 6. jūn. - 741 lappuses What’s New in the Third Edition, Revised Printing The same great book gets better! This revised printing features all of the original content along with these additional features:• Appendix A (Assemblers, Linkers, and the SPIM Simulator) has been moved from the CD-ROM into the printed book• Corrections and bug fixesThird Edition featuresNew pedagogical features• Understanding Program Performance - Analyzes key performance issues from the programmer’s perspective • Check Yourself Questions - Helps students assess their understanding of key points of a section • Computers In the Real World - Illustrates the diversity of applications of computing technology beyond traditional desktop and servers • For More Practice - Provides students with additional problems they can tackle • In More Depth - Presents new information and challenging exercises for the advanced student New reference features • Highlighted glossary terms and definitions appear on the book page, as bold-faced entries in the index, and as a separate and searchable reference on the CD. • A complete index of the material in the book and on the CD appears in the printed index and the CD includes a fully searchable version of the same index. • Historical Perspectives and Further Readings have been updated and expanded to include the history of software R&D. • CD-Library provides materials collected from the web which directly support the text. In addition to thoroughly updating every aspect of the text to reflect the most current computing technology, the third edition • Uses standard 32-bit MIPS 32 as the primary teaching ISA. • Presents the assembler-to-HLL translations in both C and Java. • Highlights the latest developments in architecture in Real Stuff sections: - Intel IA-32 - Power PC 604 - Google’s PC cluster - Pentium P4 - SPEC CPU2000 benchmark suite for processors - SPEC Web99 benchmark for web servers - EEMBC benchmark for embedded systems - AMD Opteron memory hierarchy - AMD vs. 1A-64 New support for distinct course goals Many of the adopters who have used our book throughout its two editions are refining their courses with a greater hardware or software focus. We have provided new material to support these course goals: New material to support a Hardware Focus • Using logic design conventions • Designing with hardware description languages • Advanced pipelining • Designing with FPGAs • HDL simulators and tutorials • Xilinx CAD tools New material to support a Software Focus • How compilers work • How to optimize compilers • How to implement object oriented languages • MIPS simulator and tutorial • History sections on programming languages, compilers, operating systems and databases On the CD• NEW: Search function to search for content on both the CD-ROM and the printed text• CD-Bars: Full length sections that are introduced in the book and presented on the CD • CD-Appendixes: Appendices B-D • CD-Library: Materials collected from the web which directly support the text • CD-Exercises: For More Practice provides exercises and solutions for self-study• In More Depth presents new information and challenging exercises for the advanced or curious student • Glossary: Terms that are defined in the text are collected in this searchable reference • Further Reading: References are organized by the chapter they support • Software: HDL simulators, MIPS simulators, and FPGA design tools • Tutorials: SPIM, Verilog, and VHDL • Additional Support: Processor Models, Labs, Homeworks, Index covering the book and CD contents Instructor Support Instructor support provided on textbooks.elsevier.com:• Solutions to all the exercises • Figures from the book in a number of formats • Lecture slides prepared by the authors and other instructors • Lecture notes |
Saturs
xi | |
2 | |
46 | |
3 Arithmetic for Computers | 158 |
4 Assessing and Understanding Performance | 238 |
Datapath and Control | 282 |
6 Enhancing Performance with Pipelining | 368 |
Exploiting Memory Hierarchy | 466 |
8 Storage Networks and Other Peripherals | 564 |
Appendix A Assemblers Linkers and the SPIM Simulator | A-2 |
I-1 | |
I-17 | |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
ALUOp arithmetic assembly language bandwidth benchmarks binary branch buffer byte called Chapter clock cycle clock rate compiler control lines control signals data hazards Data memory datapath digits disk example exception execution faster fetch field Figure floating-point hardware hazards I/O devices implementation input instruction set integer Intel interface interrupt Java jump label latency logic loop machine main memory memory access memory hierarchy memory system MIPS architecture MIPS assembly MIPS instruction miss penalty miss rate multicycle multiple multiplexor opcode operands operating system output overflow page fault page table Pentium performance pipeline register pointer procedure processor pseudoinstruction R-type Read data register file result Section segment set associative Shift left shows significand single-cycle SPIM stack stage stalls subtract tion TLB miss transfer unsigned virtual address virtual memory Write data zero
Populāri fragmenti
xi. lappuse - The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead: his eyes are closed.
2. lappuse - It is a profoundly erroneous truism, repeated by all copy-books and by eminent people when they are making speeches, that we should cultivate the habit of thinking of what we are doing. The precise opposite is the case. Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations which we can perform without thinking about them.
18. lappuse - I think of a computer display as a window on Alice's Wonderland in which a programmer can depict either objects that obey well-known natural laws or purely imaginary objects that follow laws he has written into his program. Through computer displays I have landed an airplane on the deck of a moving carrier, observed a nuclear particle hit a potential well, flown in a rocket at nearly the speed of light and watched a computer reveal its innermost workings.
11. lappuse - Paris they simply stared when I spoke to them in French; I never did succeed in making those idiots understand their own language.
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Atsauces uz šo grāmatu
Data Access and Storage Management for Embedded Programmable Processors Francky Catthoor,K. Danckaert Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2002 |
Numerical Computing with IEEE Floating Point Arithmetic Michael L. Overton Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 2001 |