- PA-RISC family
PA-RISC is a
microprocessor architecture developed byHewlett-Packard 's "Systems &VLSI Technology Operation". As the name implies, it is an implementation using aRISC ("Reduced Instruction Set Computing") design, where the PA stands for Precision Architecture. The design is also referred to as HP/PA for "Hewlett Packard Precision Architecture". PA may also refer toPalo Alto , California, the location of HP's headquarters.PA-RISC is nearing the end of its life. [ [http://www.hp.com/products1/evolution/9000/faqs.html#2 How long will HP continue to support HP 9000 systems?] ] HP will support servers running PA-RISC chips until 2013, but will stop selling the latest HP 9000 systems in 2008. Newer
Itanium -based machines are supposed to succeed PA-RISC in its market segment. [ [http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=164302278 HP Completes Its PA-RISC Road Map With Final Processor Upgrade - PA-RISC Processor] ]History
In the late 1980s HP was building four series of computers, all based on CISC CPUs. One line was the
IBM PC compatible Inteli286 based Vectra Series started1986 . All others were non-Intel systems. One of them was the HP Series 300 ofMotorola 68000 -basedworkstation s (in 1990 they had one additional 68000-based Series, the new HP Apollo Series 400, a workstation line they took over when they purchasedApollo Computer in 1989), another Series 200 line of technical workstations based on a customsilicon on sapphire (SOS) chip design, the SOS based 16-bitHP 3000 classic series and finally the HP 9000 Series 500minicomputer s, based on their own (16 and 32-bit) FOCUS CPU. HP planned to use the PA-RISC to move all of their non-PC compatible machines to a single RISC CPU family.The early PA-RISC chips were
32-bit designs. They were first used in a new series ofHP 3000 machines in the late 1980s — the 930 and 950, commonly known at the time as Spectrum systems, the name given to them in the development labs. These machines ranMPE/iX . TheHP 9000 machines were soon upgraded with the PA-RISC processor as well, running theHP-UX version of UNIX.Other operating systems ported to the PA-RISC processor include
Linux ,OpenBSD ,NetBSD ,NEXTSTEP , and an unreleasedWindows NT [There were several rumors in the mid-1990s which mention an HP-internal/unreleased Windows NT port to PA-RISC, cf. for one example [http://groups.google.com/group/comp.sys.hp.apps/msg/86b6743e28050c32?dmode=source Re: Windows NT for PA-RISC, David Peter (comp.sys.hp.apps USENET post December 1995)] ] .An interesting aspect of the PA-RISC line is that most of its generations have no Level 2 cache. Instead large Level 1 caches are used, formerly as separate chips connected by a bus, and now integrated on-chip. Only the PA-7100LC and PA-7300LC had L2 caches. Another innovation of the PA-RISC was the addition of vectorized instructions (
SIMD ) in the form of MAX which were first introduced on the PA-7100LC.The design was upgraded in 1996 to the PA-RISC 2.0 architecture, which is fully
64-bit . The PA-RISC 2.0 architecture addedfused multiply-add instructions, which helps speed up floating-point calculations. The first product of this series was the PA-8000, which featured ten functional units and an aggressive pipelining system. Another change was the splitting of the instruction cache, with separate caches for instructions that take long or short time to complete. The PA-8200 was released in 1997 and was much like the PA-8000 with better branch prediction, lower TLB miss rates, and larger, faster caches.The PA-8500 design added the cache to the main chip, with 1.5 MB of Level 1 cache. Consequently, it was a great performer for its time. With its introduction the
Runway bus was upgraded to a DDR implementation providing ~2 GB/s peak bandwidth to memory. Its branch history table was doubled in size to 2048 entries and itstranslation lookaside buffer was increased from 120 to 160 entries.The 8600 is essentially a higher clocked 8500 with a quasi-LRU instruction cache eviction policy. The 8700 is clocked higher than the 8600, to which it is otherwise similar, and has 2.25 MB of L1 cache. It also gained a quasi-LRU data cache eviction policy and data prefetch capability. It is worth noting that the relatively high latencies of the integrated L1, a tradeoff due to its size, may limit performance. However, the size of HP's integrated caches remain impressive for their process sizes.
The PA-8800, codenamed Mako, features 2 independent microprocessors on a single die. Thus each "chip" forms a 2-way SMP set. Each processor on the 8800 has a 1.5 MB L1 cache, but HP is leaving behind its L1-only design custom by including 32 MB of L2 cache using separate chips. The Runway bus has been replaced by the 6.4 GB/s
zx1 bus, allowing greater bandwidth and the use of otherwise very similar server designs for both PA-RISC andItanium .The PA-8900 is similar to the 8800, but features a faster 64 MB shared L2 and slight core improvements such as better error detection and correction on caches. It is not a die shrink of the 8800, as was earlier rumored. It is the last in the PA-RISC line. Fact|date=September 2008
The core design introduced with the PA-8000 has not changed significantly to date; each later generation has concentrated only on increasing clock speed and integrating incremental improvements like larger caches and, finally, 2 cores on one chip.
PA-RISC microprocessor specifications
ee also
*
Hombre chipset (PA-RISC 7150 based chipset with complete multimedia system for Commodore-Amiga ).References
External links
* [http://h21007.www2.hp.com/dspp/tech/tech_TechByTypePage_IDX/1,4690,40106-0,00.html HP's documentation] - page down for PA-RISC, Architecture PDFs available.
* [http://www.openpa.net/ OpenPA.net] Comprehensive PA-RISC chip and computer information.
* [http://www.openbsd.org/hppa.html OpenBSD/hppa] OpenBSD on PA-RISC
* [http://www.parisc-linux.org/ PA-RISC Linux] Homepage of the PA-RISC Linux port
* [http://www.chipdb.org/cat-pa-risc-592.htm chipdb.org] Images of different PA-RISC processors
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