TILE64
General information | |
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Launched | 2007 |
Common manufacturer | |
Performance | |
Max. CPU clock rate | 600 MHz to 900 MHz |
Architecture and classification | |
Technology node | 45 nm to 90 nm |
Physical specifications | |
Cores |
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TILE64 is a multicore processor manufactured by Tilera. It consists of a mesh network of 64 "tiles", where each tile houses a general purpose processor, cache, and a non-blocking router, which the tile uses to communicate with the other tiles on the processor.
The short-pipeline, in-order, three-issue cores implement a MIPS-inspired[1] VLIW instruction set. Each core has a register file and three functional units: two integer arithmetic logic units and a load-store unit. Each of the cores ("tile") has its own L1 and L2 caches plus an overall virtual L3 cache which is an aggregate of all the L2 caches.[2] A core is able to run a full operating system on its own or multiple cores can be used to run a symmetrical multi-processing operating system.
TILE64 has four DDR2 controllers, two 10-gigabit Ethernet interfaces, two four-lane PCIe interfaces, and a "flexible" input/output interface, which can be software-configured to handle a number of protocols. The processor is fabricated using a 90 nm process and runs at speeds of 600 to 900 MHz.
According to CTO and co-founder Anant Agarwal, Tilera will target the chip at networking equipment and digital video markets where the demands for computing processing are high.[3]
Support for the TILE64 architecture was added to Linux kernel version 2.6.36.[4] Non-official LLVM back-end for Tilera exists.[5]
References
- ^ https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6515358/what-instruction-set-is-used-by-tilera-microprocessors
- ^ Kingman, Henry (August 20, 2007). "Massively multicore processor runs Linux". linuxdevices.com. Archived from the original on September 6, 2012.
- ^ Boslet, Mark (August 20, 2007). "Start-up Tilera to Unveil 64-core chip". San Jose Mercury News.
- ^ "Tilera architecture support". Kernel Newbies. October 20, 2010.
- ^ Tilera TILE64 Back-End For LLVM Published // Phoronix, September 6, 2012