COMPUTER ORGANIZATION AND DESIGN
5
Edition
th
The Hardware/Software Interface
Chapter 4
The Processor
§4.1 Introduction
Introduction
CPU performance factors
Instruction count
Determined by ISA and compiler
CPI and Cycle time
Determined by CPU hardware
We will examine two MIPS implementations
A simplified version
A more realistic pipelined version
Simple subset, shows most aspects
Memory reference: lw, sw
Arithmetic/logical: add, sub, and, or, slt
Control transfer: beq, j
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 2
Instruction Execution
PC instruction memory, fetch instruction
Register numbers register file, read registers
Depending on instruction class
Use ALU to calculate
Arithmetic result
Memory address for load/store
Branch target address
Access data memory for load/store
PC target address or PC + 4
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 3
CPU Overview
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 4
Multiplexers
Can’t just join
wires together
Use multiplexers
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 5
Control
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 6
§4.2 Logic Design Conventions
Logic Design Basics
Information encoded in binary
Low voltage = 0, High voltage = 1
One wire per bit
Multi-bit data encoded on multi-wire buses
Combinational element
Operate on data
Output is a function of input
State (sequential) elements
Store information
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 7
Combinational Elements
AND-gate Adder A
Y
+
Y=A&B Y=A+B B
A
Y
B
Arithmetic/Logic Unit
Multiplexer Y = F(A, B)
Y = S ? I1 : I0
A
I0 M
u Y ALU Y
I1 x
B
S F
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 8
Sequential Elements
Register: stores data in a circuit
Uses a clock signal to determine when to
update the stored value
Edge-triggered: update when Clk changes
from 0 to 1
Clk
D Q
D
Clk
Q
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 9
Sequential Elements
Register with write control
Only updates on clock edge when write
control input is 1
Used when stored value is required later
Clk
D Q Write
Write D
Clk
Q
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 10
Clocking Methodology
Combinational logic transforms data
during clock cycles
Between clock edges
Input from state elements, output to state
element
Longest delay determines clock period
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 11
§4.3 Building a Datapath
Building a Datapath
Datapath
Elements that process data and addresses
in the CPU
Registers, ALUs, mux’s, memories, …
We will build a MIPS datapath
incrementally
Refining the overview design
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 12
Instruction Fetch
Increment by
4 for next
32-bit instruction
register
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 13
R-Format Instructions
Read two register operands
Perform arithmetic/logical operation
Write register result
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 14
Load/Store Instructions
Read register operands
Calculate address using 16-bit offset
Use ALU, but sign-extend offset
Load: Read memory and update register
Store: Write register value to memory
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 15
Branch Instructions
Read register operands
Compare operands
Use ALU, subtract and check Zero output
Calculate target address
Sign-extend displacement
Shift left 2 places (word displacement)
Add to PC + 4
Already calculated by instruction fetch
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 16
Branch Instructions
Just
re-routes
wires
Sign-bit wire
replicated
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 17
Composing the Elements
First-cut data path does an instruction in
one clock cycle
Each datapath element can only do one
function at a time
Hence, we need separate instruction and data
memories
Use multiplexers where alternate data
sources are used for different instructions
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 18
R-Type/Load/Store Datapath
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 19
Full Datapath
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 20
§4.4 A Simple Implementation Scheme
ALU Control
ALU used for
Load/Store: F = add
Branch: F = subtract
R-type: F depends on funct field
ALU control Function
0000 AND
0001 OR
0010 add
0110 subtract
0111 set-on-less-than
1100 NOR
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 21
ALU Control
Assume 2-bit ALUOp derived from opcode
Combinational logic derives ALU control
opcode ALUOp Operation funct ALU function ALU control
lw 00 load word XXXXXX add 0010
sw 00 store word XXXXXX add 0010
beq 01 branch equal XXXXXX subtract 0110
R-type 10 add 100000 add 0010
subtract 100010 subtract 0110
AND 100100 AND 0000
OR 100101 OR 0001
set-on-less-than 101010 set-on-less-than 0111
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 22
The Main Control Unit
Control signals derived from instruction
R-type 0 rs rt rd shamt funct
31:26 25:21 20:16 15:11 10:6 5:0
Load/
35 or 43 rs rt address
Store
31:26 25:21 20:16 15:0
Branch 4 rs rt address
31:26 25:21 20:16 15:0
opcode always read, write for sign-extend
read except R-type and add
for load and load
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 23
Datapath With Control
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 24
R-Type Instruction
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 25
Load Instruction
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 26
Branch-on-Equal Instruction
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 27
Implementing Jumps
Jump 2 address
31:26 25:0
Jump uses word address
Update PC with concatenation of
Top 4 bits of old PC
26-bit jump address
00
Need an extra control signal decoded from
opcode
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 28
Datapath With Jumps Added
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 29
Performance Issues
Longest delay determines clock period
Critical path: load instruction
Instruction memory register file ALU
data memory register file
Not feasible to vary period for different
instructions
Violates design principle
Making the common case fast
We will improve performance by pipelining
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 30
§4.5 An Overview of Pipelining
Pipelining Analogy
Pipelined laundry: overlapping execution
Parallelism improves performance
Four loads:
Speedup
= 8/3.5 = 2.3
Non-stop:
Speedup
= 2n/0.5n + 1.5 ≈ 4
= number of stages
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 31
MIPS Pipeline
Five stages, one step per stage
1. IF: Instruction fetch from memory
2. ID: Instruction decode & register read
3. EX: Execute operation or calculate address
4. MEM: Access memory operand
5. WB: Write result back to register
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 32
Pipeline Performance
Assume time for stages is
100ps for register read or write
200ps for other stages
Compare pipelined datapath with single-cycle
datapath
Instr Instr fetch Register ALU op Memory Register Total time
read access write
lw 200ps 100 ps 200ps 200ps 100 ps 800ps
sw 200ps 100 ps 200ps 200ps 700ps
R-format 200ps 100 ps 200ps 100 ps 600ps
beq 200ps 100 ps 200ps 500ps
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 33
Pipeline Performance
Single-cycle (Tc= 800ps)
Pipelined (Tc= 200ps)
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 34
Pipeline Speedup
If all stages are balanced
i.e., all take the same time
Time between instructionspipelined
= Time between instructionsnonpipelined
Number of stages
If not balanced, speedup is less
Speedup due to increased throughput
Latency (time for each instruction) does not
decrease
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 35
Pipelining and ISA Design
MIPS ISA designed for pipelining
All instructions are 32-bits
Easier to fetch and decode in one cycle
c.f. x86: 1- to 17-byte instructions
Few and regular instruction formats
Can decode and read registers in one step
Load/store addressing
Can calculate address in 3rd stage, access memory
in 4th stage
Alignment of memory operands
Memory access takes only one cycle
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 36
Hazards
Situations that prevent starting the next
instruction in the next cycle
Structure hazards
A required resource is busy
Data hazard
Need to wait for previous instruction to
complete its data read/write
Control hazard
Deciding on control action depends on
previous instruction
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 37
Structure Hazards
Conflict for use of a resource
In MIPS pipeline with a single memory
Load/store requires data access
Instruction fetch would have to stall for that
cycle
Would cause a pipeline “bubble”
Hence, pipelined datapaths require
separate instruction/data memories
Or separate instruction/data caches
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 38
Data Hazards
An instruction depends on completion of
data access by a previous instruction
add $s0, $t0, $t1
sub $t2, $s0, $t3
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 39
Forwarding (aka Bypassing)
Use result when it is computed
Don’t wait for it to be stored in a register
Requires extra connections in the datapath
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 40
Load-Use Data Hazard
Can’t always avoid stalls by forwarding
If value not computed when needed
Can’t forward backward in time!
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 41
Code Scheduling to Avoid Stalls
Reorder code to avoid use of load result in
the next instruction
C code for A = B + E; C = B + F;
lw $t1, 0($t0) lw $t1, 0($t0)
lw $t2, 4($t0) lw $t2, 4($t0)
stall add $t3, $t1, $t2 lw $t4, 8($t0)
sw $t3, 12($t0) add $t3, $t1, $t2
lw $t4, 8($t0) sw $t3, 12($t0)
stall add $t5, $t1, $t4 add $t5, $t1, $t4
sw $t5, 16($t0) sw $t5, 16($t0)
13 cycles 11 cycles
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 42
Control Hazards
Branch determines flow of control
Fetching next instruction depends on branch
outcome
Pipeline can’t always fetch correct instruction
Still working on ID stage of branch
In MIPS pipeline
Need to compare registers and compute
target early in the pipeline
Add hardware to do it in ID stage
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 43
Stall on Branch
Wait until branch outcome determined
before fetching next instruction
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 44
Branch Prediction
Longer pipelines can’t readily determine
branch outcome early
Stall penalty becomes unacceptable
Predict outcome of branch
Only stall if prediction is wrong
In MIPS pipeline
Can predict branches not taken
Fetch instruction after branch, with no delay
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 45
MIPS with Predict Not Taken
Prediction
correct
Prediction
incorrect
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 46
More-Realistic Branch Prediction
Static branch prediction
Based on typical branch behavior
Example: loop and if-statement branches
Predict backward branches taken
Predict forward branches not taken
Dynamic branch prediction
Hardware measures actual branch behavior
e.g., record recent history of each branch
Assume future behavior will continue the trend
When wrong, stall while re-fetching, and update history
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 47
Pipeline Summary
The BIG Picture
Pipelining improves performance by
increasing instruction throughput
Executes multiple instructions in parallel
Each instruction has the same latency
Subject to hazards
Structure, data, control
Instruction set design affects complexity of
pipeline implementation
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 48
§4.6 Pipelined Datapath and Control
MIPS Pipelined Datapath
MEM
Right-to-left WB
flow leads to
hazards
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 49
Pipeline registers
Need registers between stages
To hold information produced in previous cycle
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 50
Pipeline Operation
Cycle-by-cycle flow of instructions through
the pipelined datapath
“Single-clock-cycle” pipeline diagram
Shows pipeline usage in a single cycle
Highlight resources used
c.f. “multi-clock-cycle” diagram
Graph of operation over time
We’ll look at “single-clock-cycle” diagrams
for load & store
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 51
IF for Load, Store, …
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 52
ID for Load, Store, …
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 53
EX for Load
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 54
MEM for Load
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 55
WB for Load
Wrong
register
number
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 56
Corrected Datapath for Load
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 57
EX for Store
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 58
MEM for Store
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 59
WB for Store
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 60
Multi-Cycle Pipeline Diagram
Form showing resource usage
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 61
Multi-Cycle Pipeline Diagram
Traditional form
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 62
Single-Cycle Pipeline Diagram
State of pipeline in a given cycle
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 63
Pipelined Control (Simplified)
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 64
Pipelined Control
Control signals derived from instruction
As in single-cycle implementation
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 65
Pipelined Control
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 66
§4.7 Data Hazards: Forwarding vs. Stalling
Data Hazards in ALU Instructions
Consider this sequence:
sub $2, $1,$3
and $12,$2,$5
or $13,$6,$2
add $14,$2,$2
sw $15,100($2)
We can resolve hazards with forwarding
How do we detect when to forward?
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 67
Dependencies & Forwarding
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 68
Detecting the Need to Forward
Pass register numbers along pipeline
e.g., ID/EX.RegisterRs = register number for Rs
sitting in ID/EX pipeline register
ALU operand register numbers in EX stage
are given by
ID/EX.RegisterRs, ID/EX.RegisterRt
Data hazards when Fwd from
1a. EX/MEM.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRs EX/MEM
pipeline reg
1b. EX/MEM.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRt
2a. MEM/WB.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRs Fwd from
MEM/WB
2b. MEM/WB.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRt pipeline reg
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 69
Detecting the Need to Forward
But only if forwarding instruction will write
to a register!
EX/MEM.RegWrite, MEM/WB.RegWrite
And only if Rd for that instruction is not
$zero
EX/MEM.RegisterRd ≠ 0,
MEM/WB.RegisterRd ≠ 0
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 70
Forwarding Paths
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 71
Forwarding Conditions
EX hazard
if (EX/MEM.RegWrite and (EX/MEM.RegisterRd ≠ 0)
and (EX/MEM.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRs))
ForwardA = 10
if (EX/MEM.RegWrite and (EX/MEM.RegisterRd ≠ 0)
and (EX/MEM.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRt))
ForwardB = 10
MEM hazard
if (MEM/WB.RegWrite and (MEM/WB.RegisterRd ≠ 0)
and (MEM/WB.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRs))
ForwardA = 01
if (MEM/WB.RegWrite and (MEM/WB.RegisterRd ≠ 0)
and (MEM/WB.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRt))
ForwardB = 01
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 72
Double Data Hazard
Consider the sequence:
add $1,$1,$2
add $1,$1,$3
add $1,$1,$4
Both hazards occur
Want to use the most recent
Revise MEM hazard condition
Only fwd if EX hazard condition isn’t true
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 73
Revised Forwarding Condition
MEM hazard
if (MEM/WB.RegWrite and (MEM/WB.RegisterRd ≠ 0)
and not (EX/MEM.RegWrite and (EX/MEM.RegisterRd ≠ 0)
and (EX/MEM.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRs))
and (MEM/WB.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRs))
ForwardA = 01
if (MEM/WB.RegWrite and (MEM/WB.RegisterRd ≠ 0)
and not (EX/MEM.RegWrite and (EX/MEM.RegisterRd ≠ 0)
and (EX/MEM.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRt))
and (MEM/WB.RegisterRd = ID/EX.RegisterRt))
ForwardB = 01
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 74
Datapath with Forwarding
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 75
Load-Use Data Hazard
Need to stall
for one cycle
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 76
Load-Use Hazard Detection
Check when using instruction is decoded
in ID stage
ALU operand register numbers in ID stage
are given by
IF/ID.RegisterRs, IF/ID.RegisterRt
Load-use hazard when
ID/EX.MemRead and
((ID/EX.RegisterRt = IF/ID.RegisterRs) or
(ID/EX.RegisterRt = IF/ID.RegisterRt))
If detected, stall and insert bubble
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 77
How to Stall the Pipeline
Force control values in ID/EX register
to 0
EX, MEM and WB do nop (no-operation)
Prevent update of PC and IF/ID register
Using instruction is decoded again
Following instruction is fetched again
1-cycle stall allows MEM to read data for lw
Can subsequently forward to EX stage
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 78
Stall/Bubble in the Pipeline
Stall inserted
here
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 79
Stall/Bubble in the Pipeline
Or, more
accurately…
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 80
Datapath with Hazard Detection
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 81
Stalls and Performance
The BIG Picture
Stalls reduce performance
But are required to get correct results
Compiler can arrange code to avoid
hazards and stalls
Requires knowledge of the pipeline structure
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 82
§4.8 Control Hazards
Branch Hazards
If branch outcome determined in MEM
Flush these
instructions
(Set control
values to 0)
PC
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 83
Reducing Branch Delay
Move hardware to determine outcome to ID
stage
Target address adder
Register comparator
Example: branch taken
36: sub $10, $4, $8
40: beq $1, $3, 7
44: and $12, $2, $5
48: or $13, $2, $6
52: add $14, $4, $2
56: slt $15, $6, $7
...
72: lw $4, 50($7)
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 84
Example: Branch Taken
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 85
Example: Branch Taken
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 86
Data Hazards for Branches
If a comparison register is a destination of
2nd or 3rd preceding ALU instruction
add $1, $2, $3 IF ID EX MEM WB
add $4, $5, $6 IF ID EX MEM WB
… IF ID EX MEM WB
beq $1, $4, target IF ID EX MEM WB
Can resolve using forwarding
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 87
Data Hazards for Branches
If a comparison register is a destination of
preceding ALU instruction or 2nd preceding
load instruction
Need 1 stall cycle
lw $1, addr IF ID EX MEM WB
add $4, $5, $6 IF ID EX MEM WB
beq stalled IF ID
beq $1, $4, target ID EX MEM WB
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 88
Data Hazards for Branches
If a comparison register is a destination of
immediately preceding load instruction
Need 2 stall cycles
lw $1, addr IF ID EX MEM WB
beq stalled IF ID
beq stalled ID
beq $1, $0, target ID EX MEM WB
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 89
Dynamic Branch Prediction
In deeper and superscalar pipelines, branch
penalty is more significant
Use dynamic prediction
Branch prediction buffer (aka branch history table)
Indexed by recent branch instruction addresses
Stores outcome (taken/not taken)
To execute a branch
Check table, expect the same outcome
Start fetching from fall-through or target
If wrong, flush pipeline and flip prediction
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 90
1-Bit Predictor: Shortcoming
Inner loop branches mispredicted twice!
outer: …
…
inner: …
…
beq …, …, inner
…
beq …, …, outer
Mispredict as taken on last iteration of
inner loop
Then mispredict as not taken on first
iteration of inner loop next time around
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 91
2-Bit Predictor
Only change prediction on two successive
mispredictions
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 92
Calculating the Branch Target
Even with predictor, still need to calculate
the target address
1-cycle penalty for a taken branch
Branch target buffer
Cache of target addresses
Indexed by PC when instruction fetched
If hit and instruction is branch predicted taken, can
fetch target immediately
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 93
§4.9 Exceptions
Exceptions and Interrupts
“Unexpected” events requiring change
in flow of control
Different ISAs use the terms differently
Exception
Arises within the CPU
e.g., undefined opcode, overflow, syscall, …
Interrupt
From an external I/O controller
Dealing with them without sacrificing
performance is hard
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 94
Handling Exceptions
In MIPS, exceptions managed by a System
Control Coprocessor (CP0)
Save PC of offending (or interrupted) instruction
In MIPS: Exception Program Counter (EPC)
Save indication of the problem
In MIPS: Cause register
We’ll assume 1-bit
0 for undefined opcode, 1 for overflow
Jump to handler at 8000 00180
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 95
An Alternate Mechanism
Vectored Interrupts
Handler address determined by the cause
Example:
Undefined opcode: C000 0000
Overflow: C000 0020
…: C000 0040
Instructions either
Deal with the interrupt, or
Jump to real handler
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 96
Handler Actions
Read cause, and transfer to relevant
handler
Determine action required
If restartable
Take corrective action
use EPC to return to program
Otherwise
Terminate program
Report error using EPC, cause, …
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 97
§4.14 Concluding Remarks
Concluding Remarks
ISA influences design of datapath and control
Datapath and control influence design of ISA
Pipelining improves instruction throughput
using parallelism
More instructions completed per second
Latency for each instruction not reduced
Hazards: structural, data, control
Chapter 4 — The Processor — 98