1. How to Design an ISA.
- Author
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Chisnall, David
- Subjects
- *
COMPUTER organization , *INSTRUCTION set architecture , *SOFTWARE compatibility , *LINGUA francas , *ENCODING , *DESIGN , *OPTIMIZING compilers - Abstract
This article discusses the intricacies of designing instruction set architectures (ISAs), emphasizing their crucial role as a lingua franca between compilers and microarchitecture. It highlights the importance of optimizing ISAs for different source languages and microarchitectures, addressing trade-offs between encoding efficiency, instruction density, and microarchitectural complexity. The author argues against oversimplified beliefs that ISAs don't matter much compared to microarchitecture, stressing that a well-designed ISA can significantly impact performance and power consumption, particularly in complex cores. Additionally, the article explores how certain ISAs, like RISC-V, make design choices that impact emulation and compatibility with legacy software, underscoring the challenges and trade-offs inherent in ISA design.
- Published
- 2024
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