- ILLIAC II
The ILLIAC II was a revolutionary super-computer built by the University of Illinois that became operational in
1962 . The concept, proposed in 1958, pioneered ECL circuitry, pipelining, and transistor memory with a design goal of 100x speedup compared toILLIAC I .ILLIAC II had 8192 words of
core memory , backed up by 65,536 words of storage onmagnetic drum s. The core memory access time was 1.8 to 2 µs. The magnetic drum access time was 7 µs. A "fast buffer" was also provided for storage of short loops and intermediate results (similar in concept to what is now calledcache ). The "fast buffer" access time was 0.25 µs.The word size was 52 bits.
Floating point numbers used a format with 7 bits of exponent (power of 4) and 45 bits of mantissa.Instructions were either 26 bits or 13 bits long, allowing packing of up to 4 instructions per memory word.
Innovation
*The ILLIAC II was one of the first transistorized computers. Like the IBM Stretch computer, ILLIAC II was designed using "future transistors" that had not yet been invented.
*The ILLIAC II project was proposed before, and competed with IBM's Stretch project, and several ILLIAC designers felt that Stretch borrowed many of its ideas from ILLIAC II, whose design and documentation were published openly as University of Illinois Tech Reports. [Citation |last=Gillies|first=Alice|year=2003 |title=personal communication to Donald W. Gillies.]
*The ILLIAC II had a division unit designed by faculty memberJames E. Robertson , a co-inventor of the SRT Division algorithm.
*The ILLIAC II was one of the first pipelined computers, along with IBM's Stretch Computer. The pipelined control was designed by faculty memberDonald B. Gillies . The pipeline stages were named Advanced Control, Delayed Control, and Interplay.
*The ILLIAC II was the first computer to incorporate Speed-Independent Circuitry, invented by faculty memberDavid E. Muller . Speed-Independent Circuitry is a class of asynchronous digital logic based on the MullerC-element . This digital logic, being asynchronous, runs at full speed of transistor propagation and requires no clocks.Discoveries
*During check-out of the ILLIAC II, before it became fully operational, faculty member
Donald B. Gillies programmed ILLIAC II to search for mersenne prime numbers. The computer found 3 new prime numbers. The results were immortalized for more than a decade on the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
] , and were discussed in the New York Times, recorded in the Guinness Book of World Records, and described in a journal paper in Mathematics of Computation.End of Life
The ILLIAC II computer was disassembled roughly a decade after its construction. By this time the hundreds of modules were obsolete scrap; many faculty members took components home to keep. Donald B. Gillies kept 12 (mostly control) modules. His family donated 10 of these modules and the front panel to the University of Illinois CS department in 2006.
Donald W. Gillies, the son of Donald B. Gillies, has a complete set of documentation (instruction set, design reports, research reports, and grant progress reports, roughly 2000 pages) from the ILLIAC II project, he can be contacted for further details about this computer. [ [http://www.ece.ubc.ca/~gillies http://www.ece.ubc.ca/~gillies] ] Most of this documentation should also be available as DCL technical reports in the UIUC Engineering library, although it would not be packaged as a single report.
ee also
*
ORDVAC
*ILLIAC I
*ILLIAC III
*ILLIAC IV References
External links
*Gillies, Donald B. [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0025-5718(196401)18%3A85%3C93%3ATNMPAA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-%23| Three New Mersenne Primes and a Statistical Theory] , Mathematics of Comput., Vol. 18:85 (Jan. 1964), pp. 93-97.
* [http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/univOfIllinoisUrbana/illiac/ILLIAC_II ILLIAC II documentation] at bitsavers.org
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