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1.1.1. Structure and Function of The Processor

The document discusses the components and structure of a basic processor, including the arithmetic logic unit, control unit, registers, buses, and how they relate to assembly language programs. It also covers the fetch-decode-execute cycle, factors affecting CPU performance like clock speed and cache memory, and different computer architectures like Von Neumann and Harvard architectures.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
35 views

1.1.1. Structure and Function of The Processor

The document discusses the components and structure of a basic processor, including the arithmetic logic unit, control unit, registers, buses, and how they relate to assembly language programs. It also covers the fetch-decode-execute cycle, factors affecting CPU performance like clock speed and cache memory, and different computer architectures like Von Neumann and Harvard architectures.

Uploaded by

thenuk.rodrigo
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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OCR Computer Science A Level

1.1.1 Structure and Function of the


Processor
Advanced Notes

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Specification:

1.1.1 a)

● The Arithmetic and Logic Unit


● The Control Unit
● Registers:
○ Program Counter
○ Accumulator
○ Memory Address Register
○ Memory Data Register
○ Current Instruction Register
● buses:
○ Data Bus
○ Address Bus
○ Control Bus
● How these relate to assembly language programs

1.1.1 b)

● The Fetch-Decode-Execute Cycle


● Its effect on registers

1.1.1 c)

● The factors affecting the performance of the CPU:


○ Clock Speed
○ Number of Cores
○ Cache

1.1.1 d)

● The use of pipelining in a processor to improve efficiency

1.1.1 e)

● Von Neumann architecture


● Harvard architecture
● Contemporary processor architecture

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Components of a Processor

The processor is the brain of a computer. It executes instructions which allows programs
to run.

The Arithmetic and Logic Unit


The ALU (Arithmetic and Logic Unit) completes all of the ​arithmetical and logical
operations​. Arithmetical operations include all mathematical operations such as addition
and subtraction on fixed or floating point numbers. Logical operations include boolean
logic operations such as AND, OR, NOT, and XOR.

The Control Unit


The Control Unit is the component of the processor which ​directs the operations of the
CPU​. It has the following jobs:
- Controlling and coordinating the activities of the CPU
- Managing the flow of data between the CPU and other devices
- Accepting the next instruction
- Decoding instructions
- Storing the resulting data back in memory

Registers
Registers are ​small memory cells​ that operate at a ​very high speed​. They are used to
temporarily store data​ and all ​arithmetic​, ​logical​ and ​shift​ operations occur in these
registers.

Registers Purpose

Program Counter (PC) Holds the ​address​ of the ​next instruction​ to


be executed.

Accumulator (ACC) Stores the ​results from calculations

Memory Address Register (MAR) Holds the ​address​ of a location that ​is to be
read from or written to​.

Memory Data Register (MDR) Temporarily stores data​ that has been ​read
or data that needs to be ​written​.

Current Instruction Register (CIR) Holds the ​current instruction​ being


executed, divided up into ​operand and
opcode​.

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Buses
Buses are a set of ​parallel wires​ which connect ​two or more components​ inside the CPU.
There are three buses in the CPU: ​data bus​, ​control bus​, and ​address bus​. These buses
collectively are called the ​system bus​.

The width of the bus is the ​number of parallel wires​ the bus has. The width of the bus is
directly proportional​ to the ​number of bits​ that can be transferred ​simultaneously​ at any
given time. buses are typically 8, 16, 32 or 64 wires wide.

Data Bus
This is a ​bi-directional bus​ (meaning bits can be carried in both directions). This is used for
transporting ​data​ and ​instructions​ between components.

Address Bus
This is the bus used to transmit the ​memory addresses​ specifying where data is to be sent
to or retrieved from. The width of the address bus is proportional to the ​number of
addressable memory locations​.

Control Bus
This is a ​bi-directional​ bus used to transmit ​control signals​ between internal and external
components. The control bus coordinates the use of the address and data buses and
provides status information between system components.

The control signals include:


- Bus request: shows that a device is requesting the use of the ​data bus
- Bus grant: shows that the CPU has ​granted access​ to the data bus
- Memory write: data is written into the addressed location using this bus
- Memory read: data is read from a specific location to be placed onto the data bus,
- Interrupt request: shows that a device is requesting access to the CPU
- Clock: used to ​synchronise operations

Assembly language
Assembly code​ uses ​mnemonics​ to represent instructions,
for example ADD represents addition. This is a simplified
way of representing ​machine code​.
The instruction is divided into ​operand​ and ​opcode​ in the
Current Instruction Register. The operand contains the data
or the ​address​ of the data upon which the operation is to be
performed. The opcode specifies the ​type of instruction​ to
be executed.

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Operation Code Operand

Machine Code Operation Addressing


mode

0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1

A Level only
Pipelining

Pipelining is the process of completing the fetch, decode, and execute cycles of ​three
separate instructions​ ​simultaneously​, holding appropriate data in a ​buffer​ in close proximity
to the CPU until it’s required. While one instruction is being executed, another can be
decoded and another fetched.

Pipelining is aimed to reduce the amount of the CPU which is kept ​idle​. It is separated into
instruction pipelining​ and ​arithmetic pipelining​. Instruction pipelining is separating out the
instruction into fetching, decoding, and executing. Arithmetic pipelining is breaking down
the arithmetic operations and overlapping them as they are performed.

Fetch-Decode-Execute Cycle and Registers

The fetch-decode-execute cycle is the​ sequence of operations​ that are completed in order
to execute an instruction.

Fetch phase:
- Address from the PC is copied to the MAR
- Instruction held at that address is copied to MDR by the data bus
- Simultaneously, the contents of the PC are increased by 1
- The value held in the MDR is copied to the CIR
Decode phase:
- The contents of CIR are split into operand and opcode
Execute phase:
- The decoded instruction is executed

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Factors affecting CPU performance

There are three factors that affect CPU performance: clock speed, number of cores and
the amount and type of cache memory.

Clock speed
The clock speed is determined by the ​system clock​. This is an electronic device which
generates signals​, switching between 0 and 1. All processor activities begin on a clock
pulse, and each CPU operation starts as the clock changes from 0 to 1. The clock speed is
the time taken for one clock cycle to complete.

Number of cores
A core is an ​independent processor​ that is able to run its own fetch-execute cycle. A
computer with multiple cores can complete ​more than one​ fetch-execute cycle at any given
time. A computer with dual cores can theoretically complete tasks ​twice as fast​ as a
computer with a single core. However, not all programs are able to utilise multiple cores
efficiently as they have not been designed to do so, so this is not always possible.

Amount and type of Cache Memory


Cache memory is the ​CPU’s​ ​onboard memory​. Instructions fetched from main memory are
copied to the cache, so if required again, they can be accessed quicker. As cache fills up,
unused instructions are replaced.

Cache Type Properties

Level 1 Cache Very fast memory cells with a small


capacity. (2-64KB)

Level 2 Cache Relatively fast memory cell, with a medium


sized capacity. (256KB-2MB)

Level 3 Cache Much larger and slower memory cell.

Computer Architecture

Von Neumann Architecture


This architecture includes the basic components of the computer and processor (single
control unit​, ​ALU​, ​registers​ and ​memory units​) in which a ​shared memory ​and ​shared data
bus​ is used for both data and instructions. Von Neumann architecture is built on the stored
program concept.
Harvard Architecture

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Harvard architecture has physically separate memories for instructions and data, more
commonly used with embedded processors.This is useful for when memories have
different characteristics​, i.e. instructions may be read only, while data may be read-write.
This also allows you to optimise the size of individual memory cells and their buses
depending on your needs, i.e. the instruction memory can be designed to be larger so a
larger word size can be used for instructions.

Advantages of Von Neumann Advantages of Harvard Architecture


Architecture

Cheaper to develop​ as the control unit is Quicker execution​ as data and instructions
easier to design can be fetched in parallel.

Programs can be ​optimised in size Memories can be different sizes​, which can
make more efficient use of space

Contemporary Processing
Contemporary processors use a ​combination of Harvard and Von Neumann​ architecture.
Von Neumann is used when working with data and instructions in main memory, but uses
Harvard architecture to divide the cache into instruction cache and data cache.

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