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CSE 431 Computer Architecture Fall 2005 Lecture 01: Introduction Mary Jane Irwin ( www.cse.psu.edu/~mji ) www.cse.psu.edu/~cg431 [Adapted from Computer Organization and Design, Patterson & Hennessy, © 2005, UCB] CSE431 L01 Introduction.1 Irwin, PSU, 2005 Course Administration Instructor: Mary Jane Irwin [email protected] 348C IST Building Office Hrs: T 11:30-1:00 & W 12:30-2:00 TA: Reetuparna Das [email protected] 111A IST Office Hrs: posted on the course web page Labs: Accounts on machines in 218 and 222 IST URL: www.cse.psu.edu/~cg431 Text: Required: Computer Org and Design, 3rd Edition, Patterson and Hennessy ©2005 Optional: Superscalar Microprocessor Design Johnson, ©1991 Slides: pdf on the course web page after lecture CSE431 L01 Introduction.2 Irwin, PSU, 2005 Grading Information Grade determinates Midterm Exam ~30% - Tuesday, October 18th , 20:15 to 22:15, Location: 113 IST Final Exam ~30% - ???, December ??th, ??:?? to ??:??, Location TBD Homeworks (5) ~30% - Due at the beginning of class (or, if its code to be submitted electronically, by 17:00 on the due date). No late assignments will be accepted. Class participation & pop quizzes ~10% Let me know about midterm exam conflicts ASAP Grades will be posted on the course homepage Must submit email request for change of grade after discussions with the TA (Homeworks/Quizzes) or instructor (Exams) December 9th deadline for filing grade corrections; no requests for grade changes will be accepted after this date CSE431 L01 Introduction.3 Irwin, PSU, 2005 Course Content Content Course goals Principles of computer architecture: CPU datapath and control unit design (single-issue pipelined, superscalar, VLIW), memory hierarchies and design, I/O organization and design, advanced processor design (multiprocessors and SMT) To learn the organizational paradigms that determine the capabilities and performance of computer systems. To understand the interactions between the computer’s architecture and its software so that future software designers (compiler writers, operating system designers, database programmers, …) can achieve the best cost-performance trade-offs and so that future architects understand the effects of their design choices on software applications. Course prerequisites CSE 331. Computer Organization and Design CSE431 L01 Introduction.4 Irwin, PSU, 2005 What You Should Know - CSE271 and CSE331 Basic logic design & machine organization Create, assemble, run, debug programs in an assembly language logical minimization, FSMs, component design processor, memory, I/O MIPS preferred Create, simulate, and debug hardware structures in a hardware description language VHDL or verilog Create, compile, and run C (C++, Java) programs Create, organize, and edit files and run programs on Unix/Linux CSE431 L01 Introduction.5 Irwin, PSU, 2005 Course Structure Design focused class Various homework assignments throughout the semester Simulation of architecture alternatives using SimpleScalar Lectures: 2 weeks review of the MIPS ISA and basic architecture 2 weeks pipelined datapath design issues 3 weeks superscalar/VLSI datapath design issues 2 week memory hierarchies and memory design issues 2 weeks I/O design issues 2 weeks multiprocessor design issues 1 week exams CSE431 L01 Introduction.6 Irwin, PSU, 2005 How Do the Pieces Fit Together? Application CSE 421 Compiler Memory system Operating System CSE 411 Firmware Instr. Set Proc. Instruction Set Architecture I/O system CSE 331 & 431 & 472 Datapath & Control CSE 447 & 477 Digital Design CSE 271 & 471 & 478 Circuit Design Coordination of many levels of abstraction Under a rapidly changing set of forces Design, measurement, and evaluation CSE431 L01 Introduction.8 Irwin, PSU, 2005 Where is the Market? Millions of Computers 1200 1122 1000 892 Embedded Desktop Servers 862 800 600 488 400 290 200 0 93 3 1998 CSE431 L01 Introduction.9 114 3 1999 135 4 2000 129 4 2001 131 5 2002 Irwin, PSU, 2005 By the architecture of a system, I mean the complete and detailed specification of the user interface. … As Blaauw has said, “Where architecture tells what happens, implementation tells how it is made to happen.” The Mythical Man-Month, Brooks, pg 45 CSE431 L01 Introduction.10 Irwin, PSU, 2005 Instruction Set Architecture (ISA) ISA: An abstract interface between the hardware and the lowest level software of a machine that encompasses all the information necessary to write a machine language program that will run correctly, including instructions, registers, memory access, I/O, and so on. “... the attributes of a [computing] system as seen by the programmer, i.e., the conceptual structure and functional behavior, as distinct from the organization of the data flows and controls, the logic design, and the physical implementation.” – Amdahl, Blaauw, and Brooks, 1964 Enables implementations of varying cost and performance to run identical software ABI (application binary interface): The user portion of the instruction set plus the operating system interfaces used by application programmers. Defines a standard for binary portability across computers. CSE431 L01 Introduction.11 Irwin, PSU, 2005 ISA Type Sales Other SPARC Hitachi SH PowerPC Motorola 68K MIPS IA-32 ARM 1400 Millions of Processor 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 PowerPoint “comic” bar chart with approximate values (see text for correct values) CSE431 L01 Introduction.12 Irwin, PSU, 2005 Moore’s Law In 1965, Gordon Moore predicted that the number of transistors that can be integrated on a die would double every 18 to 24 months (i.e., grow exponentially with time). Amazingly visionary – million transistor/chip barrier was crossed in the 1980’s. 2300 transistors, 1 MHz clock (Intel 4004) - 1971 16 Million transistors (Ultra Sparc III) 42 Million transistors, 2 GHz clock (Intel Xeon) – 2001 55 Million transistors, 3 GHz, 130nm technology, 250mm2 die (Intel Pentium 4) - 2004 140 Million transistor (HP PA-8500) CSE431 L01 Introduction.13 Irwin, PSU, 2005 Processor Performance Increase Performance (SPEC Int) 10000 Intel Pentium 4/3000 DEC Alpha 21264A/667 DEC Alpha 21264/600 Intel Xeon/2000 1000 DEC Alpha 4/266 100 DEC AXP/500 DEC Alpha 5/500 DEC Alpha 5/300 IBM POWER 100 HP 9000/750 10 IBM RS6000 SUN-4/260 MIPS M2000 MIPS M/120 1 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 Year CSE431 L01 Introduction.14 Irwin, PSU, 2005 DRAM Capacity Growth 512M 256M 128M 1000000 64M Kbit capacity 100000 16M 10000 4M 1M 1000 256K 64K 100 16K 10 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 Year of introduction CSE431 L01 Introduction.15 Irwin, PSU, 2005 Impacts of Advancing Technology Processor logic capacity: performance: increases about 30% per year 2x every 1.5 years ClockCycle = 1/ClockRate 500 MHz ClockRate = 2 nsec ClockCycle 1 GHz ClockRate = 1 nsec ClockCycle 4 GHz ClockRate = 250 psec ClockCycle Memory DRAM capacity: 4x every 3 years, now 2x every 2 years memory speed: 1.5x every 10 years cost per bit: decreases about 25% per year Disk capacity: CSE431 L01 Introduction.17 increases about 60% per year Irwin, PSU, 2005 Example Machine Organization Workstation design target 25% of cost on processor 25% of cost on memory (minimum memory size) Rest on I/O devices, power supplies, box Computer CPU CSE431 L01 Introduction.18 Memory Devices Control Input Datapath Output Irwin, PSU, 2005 PC Motherboard Closeup CSE431 L01 Introduction.19 Irwin, PSU, 2005 Inside the Pentium 4 Processor Chip CSE431 L01 Introduction.20 Irwin, PSU, 2005 MIPS R3000 Instruction Set Architecture Registers Instruction Categories Load/Store Computational Jump and Branch Floating Point - R0 - R31 coprocessor PC HI Memory Management Special LO 3 Instruction Formats: all 32 bits wide OP rs rt OP rs rt OP rd sa funct immediate jump target Q: How many already familiar with MIPS ISA? CSE431 L01 Introduction.22 Irwin, PSU, 2005 Next Lecture and Reminders Next lecture MIPS ISA Review - Reading assignment – PH, Chapter 2 Reminders HW1 out next lecture, due September 13th Evening midterm exam scheduled - Tuesday, October 18th , 20:15 to 22:15, Location 113 IST - Please let me know ASAP (via email) if you have a conflict CSE431 L01 Introduction.23 Irwin, PSU, 2005