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ARC International Unveils New Configurable Processor Architecture For Power-Sensitive Embedded SystemsThe ARC™ 600 Power-Efficient Architecture Targets High-Performance Multimedia-Intensive Applications and Lends Itself to Multiprocessing Designs MICROPROCESSOR FORUM, San Jose, Calif., October 13, 2003 – ARC International (LSE: ARK), a world leader in user-customizable processors, silicon peripheral IP, real-time operating systems and development tools for embedded system design, today unveiled its new ARC™ 600 architecture, the industry’s smallest and lowest power RISC/DSP-based 32-bit configurable processor. The architecture offers designers high-speed operation, low power and enhanced DSP functionality in a small footprint. In its base case RISC-only configuration, the ARC 600 architecture core is 50 percent to 85 percent smaller than processors in its class and consumes up to 50 percent less power. With the ARC 600 architecture’s configurability and extendibility, designers have the necessary tools to balance the processor’s speed, area and power to develop an optimal solution for their specific application. Optimized for Power and Area The ARC 600 architecture features sophisticated power management schemes that include fine clock gating and I-cache way prediction. By implementing a clock gating methodology that fits into existing design flows and not clocking registers when they are not switching, the ARC 600 architecture significantly lowers the core’s power. Further saving system power, the architecture’s I-cache way prediction eliminates unnecessary accesses to memory by looking at tag information in the previous clock cycle to access only a single data RAM upon a cache hit. Addressing the impact of program memory on system cost, the ARC 600 RISC/DSP architecture also features the ARCompact ISA. The 16/32-bit ISA reduces code size by 30 percent or more when compared to standard 32-bit only ISA architectures, enabling customers to implement a lower cost and lower power solution. As part of the ARC 600 architecture’s extendibility, designers are able to include their own customized instructions or predefined ARC DSP instructions to further reduce code size and frequency requirements. Finding Balance With its five-stage pipeline and extendible RISC/DSP, the ARC 600 architecture offers ample processing power for today’s emerging multimedia and digital consumer applications. In its most basic RISC/DSP configuration, the ARC 600 architecture represents the lowest power and smallest cores in the industry. Whether the target is small size, low power, or high performance, the architecture enables system designers to find the proper balance for their design. A key component of the ARC 600 development platform is the ARChitect tool, which is used to help designers find the optimum balance between speed, area, and power. Multiprocessing and DSP Functionality The ARC 600 architecture introduces, for the first time, a “CPU Island” architecture that dramatically reduces required integration effort and greatly facilitates multiprocessor design. The CPU Island’s completely synchronous interface supports BVCI and AMBA busses and isolates the core and memory from other parts of the system such as peripherals and the system bus. By providing this clean, pre-verified boundary, a designer is able to achieve timing closure more quickly while minimizing time required for system verification. Thus, system designers can instantiate one or many of the ARC 600 architectures and still hit their time-to-market. For mathematically intensive applications, the ARC 600 architecture offers enhanced DSP performance. Capable of 32-bit arithmetic and SIMD operations, the architecture defines a rich set of optional DSP instructions to speed up multimedia applications such as digital audio and VoIP. These DSP instructions include: The architecture also provides an optional high-bandwidth XY memory and address generation unit supporting different modes such as linear, reverse-carry, and circular addressing. “The ARC 600 architecture is the result of 10 years of processor experience and significant customer input. The result is a leading class processor for the low power multimedia and consumer markets,” said Mike Gulett, president and CEO of ARC International. “The ARC 600 architecture retains the flexibility of previous ARC processors while introducing a new market standard of performance in speed, area and power, meeting a wide range of multimedia system requirements. Indeed, we believe this new architecture is the beginning of a new roadmap for the company in configurable RISC/DSP-based systems.”
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