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The Pentium 4 CPSC 321 Andreas Klappenecker
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Today’s Menu Advanced Pipelining Brief overview of the Pentium 4
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Instruction Level Parallelism Pipelining exploits the potential parallelism among instructions. There are two main methods to increase the potential amount of parallelism: Increase the depth of the pipeline to overlap more instructions Replicate the internal components of the computer so that it can launch multiple instructions in every pipeline stage
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Washer-Dryer Example Suppose that the washer cycle is longer than the other cycles. We can divide our washer into three machines that perform the wash, rinse, and spin steps of a traditional washer. (Move from a four to six pipeline stages) A multiple issue laundry would replace our household washer and dryer with, say, three washers and three dryers.
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Multiple-Issue Processors We have two different approaches to multiple-issue processors: The approach to decide at compile time which instructions should be issued is called static multiple issue The approach to decide at execution time which instructions should be issued is called dynamic multiple issue
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Multiple Issues with Multiple-Issue 1.Package instructions into issue slots: How does the processor determine how many instructions and which instructions can be issued in a given clock cycle? 2.Dealing with data and control hazards: In static issue processors, some or all consequences of these hazards are handled statically by the compiler. Dynamic issue processors attempt to alleviate at least some classes of hazards using hardware techniques
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Speculation The most important method to exploit more ILP is speculation. The compiler or the processor guess about the properties of an instruction, to enable execution of instructions that depend on the current instruction. For example, a compiler can use speculation to reorder instructions and move instructions beyond a branch.
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Recovery from wrong Speculations Speculation in software: the compiler inserts additional instructions to that check the accuracy of a speculation and provide a fix-up routine when the speculation was incorrect. Speculation in hardware: The processor usually buffers the results until it knows that they are no longer speculative. If the speculation was correct, then the instructions are completed by allowing the contents to be written to registers or memory; otherwise the buffers are flushed and the correct instruction sequence is re-executed.
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Register Renaming A compiler can get more performance from loops by so-called loop unrolling; this is a technique where multiple copies of the loop are made => more ILP by overlapping instructions from different iterations In the loop unrolling, the compiler will usually introduce additional registers to eliminate dependencies that are not true data dependencies (just name dependence). The process is called register renaming.
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Pentium 4
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Intel’s History Intel Founded First DRAM 8086 Microprocessor Intel286™ Processor Intel386™ Processor Intel486™ Processor Intel Pentium® Processor Intel Pentium® Processor with MMX™ technology Intel Pentium® II Processor First EPROM Intel Pentium® Pro Processor DRAM Exit Flash Memory Intro Intel Inside® Launch ProShare® Introduced 100 Mbit E-Net Card First Intel Inside® Brand TV Ad 19681970197119781982198519861989199119921993199519941997 First Microprocessor 4004 First Intel Motherboard 1998 Intel Celeron™ Processor Intel Pentium® II Xeon™ Processor 1999 1 Gbit E-Net Card Intel Pentium® III And Xeon™ Processors Internet Exchange Architecture 20002001 Pentium® 4 Processor 2002 1 st Pb-Free Devices Slide courtesy of Intel
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The Pentium4 Architecture Graphic courtesy of Tom’s hardware guide
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A Glance at a Pentium 4 Chip Picture courtesy of Tom’s hardware guide
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Pentium4 The Pentium 4 was first released in 2000. Some of its features are: fast system bus advanced transfer cache advanced dynamic execution (execution trace cache and enhanced branch prediction) “hyper” pipeline technology rapid execution engine enhanced floating point and multimedia (SSE2)
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Some Features The processor uses micro-operations/operands simple instructions of unified length easier sequencing than variable length x86 instr. understood by the execution units the length is not exactly small
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System Bus The system bus is clocked at 100 MHz, 64 bits wide, “quad-pumped”, meaning that is can transfer 8 bytes * 100 million/s*4= 3,200 MB/s (this is about 3 times the speed of the system bus of the Pentium 3) Intel introduced the 850 chipset to sustain high data exchange rates between processor and system
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Data Caches Data passes a level 2 cache (256 KB), (8-way associative, 128 byte cache lines that are divided into 64 byte blocks that are read in one burst, read latency is 7 clock cycles; we come back later to such issues) Data passes a small level 1 cache (8 KB) Hardware pre-fetch unit (allows the processor to guess and fetch some that that is presumably used next; good for streaming video applications).
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Execution Pipeline: The Trace Cache The Pentium 4 does not use an L1 instruction cache, but rather an “execution trace cache”. Note that the decoding of x86 instructions is much more complex than on MIPS The execution trace cache is basically an instruction cache after the decoding unit (which generates the micro-operations), so that decoding does not have to be repeated. Supplies next pipeline stage with 6 micro- operations every 2 clock cycles.
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The Trace Cache Actual program instructions Trace cache can contain instructions of both branches
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The Pipeline The branch prediction aids the execution trace cache; it has a fairly large branch target buffer The 20 stage hyper pipeline The pipeline can keep up to 126 instructions
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The Pipeline Trace cache
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Rapid Execution Engine The rapid execution engine consists of two ALUs and two AGUs that run at twice the clock speed. Not every instruction can be processed by the rapid execution engine; those instructions need to use e.g. the slower ALU AGU = address generation unit to load or store at the correct address (used whenever you have indirect addressing a[i]).
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Streaming SIMD Extensions SSE2 The Pentium 4 can operate on 128 bit data as 4 single precision FP values (SSE) 2 double precision FP values (SSE2) 16 byte values (SSE2) 8 word values (SSE2) 4 double word values (SSE2) 2 quad word values 1 128 bit values single instruction multiple data instructions
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Pentium 4 Pipeline 1.Trace cache access, predictor 5 clock cycles Microoperation queue 2.Reorder buffer allocation, register renaming 4 clock cycles functional unit queues 3.Scheduling and dispatch unit 5 clock cycles 4.Register file access 2 clock cycles 5.Execution 1 clock cycle reorder buffer 6.Commit 3 clock cycles (total: 20 clock cycles)
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Pentium 4 Generations Willamette Northwood (smaller transistors, later hyper-threading) Extreme Edition (added 2MB level 3 cache) Prescott (90 nm process, new micro architecture) Irwindale (as Prescott, but with doubled L2 cache) Dual Core
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Hyper-Threading A typical thread of code of the IA-32 architecture uses about 35% of the microarchitecture execution resources. Intel added a little bit of hardware to schedule and control two threads. The operating system sees two logical processors
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To Probe Further Read Chapter 6 Hennessy and Patterson, Computer Architecture: A Quantitative Approach Intel website AMD websiter
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