Instruction set
An instruction set, or instruction set architecture (ISA), describes the aspects of a computer architecture visible to a programmer, including the native datatypes, instructions, registers, addressing modes, memory architecture, interrupt and exception handling, and external I/O (if any).
An ISA is a specification of the set of all binary codes (opcodes) which are the native form of commands implemented by a particular CPU design. The set of opcodes for a particular ISA is also known as the machine language for the ISA.
"Instruction set architecture" is sometimes used to distinguish this set of characteristics from the micro-architecture, which is the set of processor design techniques used to implement the instruction set (incliding microcode, pipelining, cache systems, and so forth). Computers with different micro-architectures can share a common instruction set. For example, the Intel Pentium and the AMD Athlon implement nearly identical versions of the x86 instruction set, but have radically different internal designs.
When designing micro-architectures, engineers use Register Transfer Language (RTL) to define the operation of each instruction of an ISA.
An ISA can also be emulated in software by a interpreter. Due to the additional translation needed for the emulation, this is usually slower than directly running programs on the hardware implementing that ISA. It is nowadays common practice for vendors of new ISAs or micro-architectures to make software emulators avaiable to software developers before the hardware implementation is ready.
List of ISAs
This list is far from comprehensive as old architectures died out and new ones invented on a continual basis. There is also a plethora of commercially available microprocessors and microcontrollers implementing ISAs in all shapes and sizes. Customized ISAs are also quite common in some applications, e.g. ARC International, application-specific integrated circuit, FPGA, and reconfigurable computing. Also see history of computing hardware.
ISAs commonly implemented in hardware
- Alpha AXP (DEC Alpha)
- ARM Acorn RISC Machine (Advanced RISC Machine)
- IA-64 (Itanium)
- MIPS
- Motorola 68k
- PA-RISC (HP Precision Architecture)
- IBM POWER
- PowerPC
- SPARC
- SuperH
- System/360
- Tricore (Infineon)
- Transputer (STMicroelectronics)
- VAX (Digital Equipment Corporation)
- x86 (IA-32, Pentium, Athlon) (AMD64, EM64T)
ISAs commonly implemented in software with hardware incarnations
- p-Code (UCSD p-System Version III on Western Digital Pascal Micro-Engine)
- Java virtual machine (ARM Jazelle, PicoJava)
- FORTH
ISAs never implemented in hardware
See also
Categories of ISA
- application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) fully custom ISA
- CISC
- digital signal processor
- graphics processing unit
- reconfigurable computing
- RISC
- vector processor
- VLIW
Examples of commercially available ISA
Others
External links
- Mark Smotherman's Historical Computer Designs Page (http://www.cs.clemson.edu/~mark/hist.html)
- John Bayko's Great Microprocessors of the Past and Present (http://www3.sk.sympatico.ca/jbayko/cpu.html)
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