[rescue] sparc10 cpu - what to do.
Sandwich Maker
adh at an.bradford.ma.us
Tue Dec 20 14:22:04 CST 2016
" On 12/20/2016 12:46 PM, Mark Linimon wrote:
" >> [...] Has there been any VLIW architecture that has been successful as a
" >> general purpose CPU?
" >
" > Modern Intel x86-64 chips, if you squint. They read in 120-bit wide
" > "instructions", which consist of up to six x86 instructions which it will
" > attempt to execute in parallel.
"
" I've wondered what kind of performance boost we could get if we ran directly
" at the microcode layer (the one that pretends it's this obsolete junk).
" From: Dave McGuire <mcguire at neurotica.com>
"
" People have been asking this since the micro-op architecture of the
" PentiumPro was publicized. Man if we only had access to that level..
i was under the impression that one of the bios blobs was instruction
set patches for buggy cpu versions. i got this iirc from openbios'
discussion on de-blobbing.
" From: Mouse <mouse at Rodents-Montreal.ORG>
"
" Significant, probably, but also hellishly complicated to do anything
" useful with. Risky, too; microcode tends to allow things like gating
" more than one internal register onto an internal data bus at the same
" time. And probably strictly Harvard, rather than von Neumann.
"
" And very, very processor-rev-specific.
but a *better* but still portable instruction set could also be
devised to sit above microcode. porting would then be reduced to
mapping a new microcode to the instruction set.
--
back at the dawn of the microprocessor stone age, i recall mos
technology offering to customize the 6502's instruction set for
high-volume customers, and i recall thinking - couldn't one get the
compiler to do this? it would have to know everything microcode could
do as well as the size of the instruction-set memory, in order to
devise the set which would enable the densest, most efficient code.
i was imagining it for high volume embedded-type apps.
yes, comparing the 6502 to modern chips is like comparing a paper dart
to the space shuttle...
________________________________________________________________________
Andrew Hay the genius nature
internet rambler is to see what all have seen
adh at an.bradford.ma.us and think what none thought
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