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MIPS Processor. Chapter 12 S. Dandamudi. Introduction Evolution of CISC Processors RISC Design Principles MIPS Architecture. Outline. Introduction. CISC Complex instruction set Pentium is the most popular example RISC Simple instructions Reduced complexity
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MIPS Processor Chapter 12 S. Dandamudi
Introduction Evolution of CISC Processors RISC Design Principles MIPS Architecture Outline S. Dandamudi
Introduction • CISC • Complex instruction set • Pentium is the most popular example • RISC • Simple instructions • Reduced complexity • Modern processors use this design philosophy • PowerPC, MIPS, SPARC, Intel Itanium • Borrow some features from CISC • No precise definition • We can identify some common characteristics S. Dandamudi
Evolution of CISC Processors • Motivation to efficiently use expensive resources • Processor • Memory • High density code • Complex instructions • Hardware complexity is handled by microprogramming • Microprogramming is also helpful to • Reduce the impact of memory access latency • Offers flexibility • Low-cost members of the same family • Tailored to high-level language constructs S. Dandamudi
Evolution of CISC Designs (cont’d) S. Dandamudi
Evolution of CISC Designs (cont’d) Example • Autoincrement addressing mode of VAX • Performs the following actions: (R2) = (R2) + R3; R2 = R2 + 1 • RISC equivalent R4 = (R2) R4 = R4 + R3 (R2) = R4 R2 = R2 + 1 S. Dandamudi
Why RISC? • Simple instructions • Complex instructions are mostly ignored by compilers • Due to semantic gap • Few data types • Complex data structures are used relatively infrequently • Better to support a few simple data types efficiently • Synthesize complex ones • Simple addressing modes • Complex addressing modes lead to variable length instructions • Lead to inefficient instruction decoding and scheduling S. Dandamudi
Why RISC? (cont’d) • Large register set • Efficient support for procedure calls and returns • Patterson and Sequin’s study • Procedure call/return: 12-15% of HLL statements • Constitute 31-33% of machine language instructions • Generate nearly half (45%) of memory references • Small activation record • Tanenbaum’s study • Only 1.25% of the calls have more than 6 arguments • More than 93% have less than 6 local scalar variables • Large register set can avoid memory references S. Dandamudi
RISC Design Principles • Simple operations • Simple instructions that can execute in one cycle • Operations can be hardwired (see next figure) • Register-to-register operations • Only load and store operations access memory • Rest of the operations on a register-to-register basis • Simple addressing modes • A few addressing modes (1 or 2) • Large number of registers • Needed to support register-to-register operations • Minimize the procedure call and return overhead S. Dandamudi
RISC Design Principles (cont’d) S. Dandamudi
RISC Design Principles (cont’d) • Fixed-length instructions • Facilitates efficient instruction execution • Simple instruction format • Fixed boundaries for various fields • opcode, source operands,… • Other features • Tend to use Harvard architecture • Pipelining is visible at the architecture level S. Dandamudi
MIPS Architecture • Registers • 32 general-purpose • Identified as $0, $1, …,$31 • Register $0 is hardwired to zero • Used when zero operand is needed • Register $31 is used as the link register • Used to store the return address of a procedure • A Program counter (PC) • 2 special-purpose • HI and LO registers • Used in multiply and divide operations S. Dandamudi
MIPS Architecture (cont’d) S. Dandamudi
MIPS Architecture (cont’d) MIPS registers and their conventional usage S. Dandamudi
MIPS Architecture (cont’d) MIPS addressing modes • Bare machine supports only a single addressing mode disp(Rx) • Virtual machine provides several additional addressing modes S. Dandamudi
Memory Usage Placement of segments allows sharing of unused memory by both data and stack segments Last slide S. Dandamudi