Microprocessor
A
microprocessor (sometimes abbreviated
µP) is a
digital electronic component with
transistors on a single
semiconductor integrated circuit (IC). One or more microprocessors typically serve as a
central processing unit (CPU) in a
computer system or
handheld device.
Microprocessors made possible the advent of the
microcomputer. Before this, electronic CPUs were typically made from bulky discrete switching devices (and later small-scale integrated circuits) containing the equivalent of only a few transistors. By integrating the processor onto one or a very few
large-scale integrated circuit packages (containing the equivalent of thousands or millions of discrete transistors), the cost of processor power was greatly reduced. Since the advent of the IC in the mid-1970s, the microprocessor has become the most prevalent implementation of the CPU, nearly completely replacing all other forms. See
History of computing hardware for pre-electronic and early electronic computers.
The evolution of microprocessors has been known to follow
Moore's Law when it comes to steadily increasing performance over the years. This law suggests that
the complexity of an integrated circuit, with respect to minimum component cost, doubles every 24 months. This rule has been generally followed, unconsciously, since the early
1970s. From their humble beginnings as the drivers for
calculators, the continued increase in power has led to the dominance of microprocessors over every other form of computer; every system from the largest
mainframes to the smallest
handheld computers now uses a microprocessor at its core.
The first microprocessors
As with many advances in technology, the microprocessor was an idea whose time had come. Three projects arguably delivered a complete microprocessor at about the same time,
Intel's
4004,
Texas Instruments'
TMS 1000, and
Garrett AiResearch's
Central Air Data Computer.
|
The 4004 with cover removed (left) and as actually used (right). |
In
1968, Garrett was invited to produce a digital computer to compete with
electromechanical systems then under development for the main flight control computer in the
US Navy's new
F-14 Tomcat fighter. The design was complete by
1970, and used a
MOS-based chipset as the core CPU. The design was smaller and much more reliable than the mechanical systems it competed against, and was used in all of the early Tomcat models. However, the system was considered so advanced that the Navy refused to allow publication of the design, and continued to refuse until
1997. For this reason the CADC, and the MP944 chipset it used, are fairly unknown even today.
TI developed the 4-bit TMS 1000 and stressed pre-programmed embedded applications, introducing a version called the TMS1802NC on
September 17,
1971, which implemented a calculator on a chip. The Intel chip was the 4-bit
4004, released on
November 15,
1971, developed by
Federico Faggin.
TI filed for the patent on the microprocessor. Gary Boone was awarded for the single-chip microprocessor architecture on
September 4,
1973. It may never be known which company actually had the first working microprocessor running on the lab bench. In both 1971 and
1976, Intel and TI entered into broad patent cross-licensing agreements, with Intel paying royalties to TI for the microprocessor patent. A nice history of these events is contained in court documentation from a
legal dispute between Cyrix and Intel, with TI as
intervenor and owner of the microprocessor patent.
Interestingly, a third party claims to have been awarded a patent which might cover the "microprocessor". See
a webpage claiming an inventor pre-dating both TI and Intel, describing a "microcontroller", which may or may not count as a "microprocessor".
A computer-on-a-chip is a variation of a microprocessor which combines the microprocessor core (CPU), some memory, and I/O (
input/output) lines, all on one
chip. The computer-on-a-chip patent, called the "microcomputer patent" at the time, , was awarded to Gary Boone and Michael J. Cochran of TI. Aside from this patent, the standard meaning of
microcomputer is a computer using one or more microprocessors as its CPU(s), while the concept defined in the patent is perhaps more akin to a
microcontroller.
According to
A History of Modern Computing, (MIT Press), pp. 220–21,
Intel entered into a contract with Computer Terminals Corporation, later called
Datapoint, of San Antonio TX, for a chip for a terminal they were designing. Datapoint later decided not to use the chip, and Intel marketed it as the 8008 in April, 1972. This was the world's first 8-bit microprocessor. It was the basis for the famous "
Mark-8" computer kit advertised in the magazine Radio-Electronics in
1974. The 8008 and its successor, the world-famous 8080, opened up the microprocessor component marketplace.
Notable 8-bit designs
The 4004 was later followed in 1972 by the
8008, the world's first
8-bit microprocessor.These processors are the precursors to the very successful
Intel 8080 (1974),
Zilog Z80 (1976), and derivative Intel 8-bit processors.The competing
Motorola 6800 was released August 1974. Its architecture was cloned and improved in the
MOS Technology 6502 in 1975, rivaling the Z80 in popularity during the
1980s.
Both the Z80 and 6502 concentrated on low overall cost, through a combination of small packaging, simple
computer bus requirements, and the inclusion of circuitry that would normally have to be provided in a separate chip (for instance, the Z80 included a memory controller). It was these features that allowed the
home computer "revolution" to take off in the early 1980s, eventually delivering semi-usable machines that sold for
US$99.
The Western Design Center, Inc. (WDC) introduced the CMOS
65C02 in 1982 and licensed the design to several companies which became the core of the
Apple IIc and IIe personal computers, medical implantable grade pacemakers and defibrilators, automotive, industrial and consumer devices. WDC pioneered the licensing of microprocessor technology which was later followed by
ARM and other microprocessor
Intellectual Property (IP) providers in the 1990's.
Motorola trumped the entire 8-bit world by introducing the
MC6809 in 1978, arguably one of the most powerful,
orthogonal, and clean 8-bit microprocessor designs ever fielded – and also one of the most complex
hardwired logic designs that ever made it into production for any microprocessor.
Microcoding replaced hardwired logic at about this point in time for all designs more powerful than the MC6809 – specifically because the design requirements were getting too complex for hardwired logic.
Another early 8-bit microprocessor was the
Signetics 2650, which enjoyed a brief flurry of interest due to its innovative and powerful
instruction set architecture.
A seminal microprocessor in the world of spaceflight was
RCA's
RCA 1802 (aka CDP1802, RCA COSMAC) (introduced in 1976) which was used in NASA's
Voyager and
Viking spaceprobes of the 1970s, and onboard the
Galileo probe to Jupiter (launched 1989, arrived 1995). RCA COSMAC was the first to implement C-MOS technology.The CDP1802 was used because it could be run at very
low power,
* and because its production process (
Silicon on Sapphire) ensured much better protection against
cosmic radiation and
electrostatic discharges than that of any other processor of the era. Thus, the 1802 is said to be the first radiation-hardened microprocessor.
16-bit designs
The first multi-chip
16-bit microprocessor was the
National Semiconductor IMP-16,introduced in early 1973. An 8-bit version of the chipset was introduced in 1974 as the
IMP-8. In 1975, National introduced the first 16-bit single-chip microprocessor, the
PACE, which was later followed by an
NMOS version, the
INS8900.
Other early multi-chip 16-bit microprocessors include one used by
Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) in the
LSI-11 OEM board set and the packaged
PDP 11/03 minicomputer, and the
Fairchild Semiconductor MicroFlame 9440, both of which were introduced in the 1975 to 1976 timeframe.
The first single-chip 16-bit microprocessor was TI's
TMS 9900, which was also compatible with their
TI 990 line of minicomputers. The 9900 was used in the TI 990/4 minicomputer, the
TI-99/4A home computer, and the TM990 line of OEM microcomputer boards. The chip was packaged in a large ceramic 64-pin
DIP package package, while most 8-bit microprocessors such as the Intel 8080 used the more common, smaller, and less expensive plastic 40-pin DIP. A follow-on chip, the TMS 9980, was designed to compete with the Intel 8080, had the full
TI 990 16-bit instruction set, used a plastic 40-pin package, moved data 8 bits at a time, but could only address 16KB. A third chip, the TMS 9995, was a new design. The family later expanded to include the 99105 and 99110.
The Western Design Center, Inc. (WDC) introduced the CMOS
65816 16-bit upgrade of the WDC CMOS
65C02 in 1984. The 65816 16-bit microprocessor was the core of the Apple IIgs and later the
Super Nintendo Entertainment System, making it one of the most popular 16-bit designs of all time.
Intel followed a different path, having no minicomputers to emulate, and instead "upsized" their 8080 design into the 16-bit
Intel 8086, the first member of the
x86 family which powers most modern
PC type computers.
Intel introduced the 8086 as a cost effective way of porting software from the 8080 lines, and succeeded in winning much business on that premise. The 8088, a version of the 8086 that used an external 8-bit data bus, was the microprocessor in the first
IBM PC, the model 5150. Following up their 8086 and 8088, Intel released the
80186,
80286 and, in 1985, the 32-bit
80386, cementing their PC market dominance with the processor family's backwards compatibility.
The integrated microprocessor
memory management unit (MMU) was developed by Childs et al. of
Intel, and awarded US patent number 4,442,484.
32-bit designs
16-bit designs were in the market only briefly when full 32-bit implementations started to appear.
The world's first single-chip 32-bit microprocessor was the
AT&T Bell Labs BELLMAC-32A, with first samples in 1980, and general production in 1982 (See this
bibliographic reference and this
general reference). After the divestiture of AT&T in 1984, it was renamed the WE 32000 (WE for
Western Electric), and had two follow-on generations, the WE 32100 and WE 32200. These microprocessors were used in the
AT&T 3B5 and 3B15 minicomputers; in the 3B2, the world's first desktop supermicrocomputer; in the "Companion", the world's first 32-bit laptop computer; and in "Alexander", the world's first book-sized supermicrocomputer, featuring ROM-pack memory cartridges similar to today's gaming consoles. All these systems ran the original
Bell Labs Unix Operating System, which included the first Windows-type software called xt-layers.
The most famous of the 32-bit designs is the
MC68000, introduced in 1979. The 68K, as it was widely known, had 32-bit registers but used 16-bit internal data paths, and a 16-bit external data bus to reduce pin count. Motorola generally described it as a 16-bit processor, though it clearly has 32-bit
architecture. The combination of high speed, large (16 megabyte) memory space and fairly low costs made it the most popular CPU design of its class. The
Apple Lisa and
Macintosh designs made use of the 68000, as did a host of other designs in the mid-1980s, including the
Atari ST and
Commodore Amiga.
Intel's first 32-bit microprocessor was the
iAPX 432, which was introduced in 1981 but was not a commercial success. It had an advanced
capability-based object-oriented architecture, but poor performance compared to other competing architectures such as the Motorola 68000.
Motorola's success with the 68000 led to the
MC68010, which added virtual memory support. The
MC68020, introduced in 1985 added full 32-bit data and address busses. The 68020 became hugely popular in the
Unix supermicrocomputer market, and many small companies (e.g., Altos, Charles River Data Systems) produced desktop-size systems. Following this with the
MC68030, which added the MMU into the chip, the 68K family became
the processor for everything that wasn't running
DOS. The continued success led to the
MC68040, which included an
FPU for better math performance. A 68050 failed to achieve its performance goals and was not released, and the follow-up
MC68060 was released into a market saturated by much faster RISC designs. The 68K family faded from the desktop in the early 1990s.
Other large companies designed the 68020 and follow-ons into embedded equipment. At one point, there were more 68020s in embedded equipment than there were
Intel Pentiums in PCs (See
this webpage for this embedded usage information). The
ColdFire processor cores are derivatives of the venerable 68020.
During this time (early to mid 1980s),
National Semiconductor introduced a very similar 16-bit pinout, 32-bit internal microprocessor called the NS 16032 (later renamed 32016), the full 32-bit version named the
NS 32032, and a line of 32-bit industrial OEM microcomputers. By the mid-1980s,
Sequent introduced the first symmetric multiprocessor (SMP) server-class computer using the NS 32032. This was one of the design's few wins, and it disappeared in the late 1980s.
Other designs included the interesting
Zilog Z8000, which arrived too late to market to stand a chance and disappeared quickly.
In the late 1980s, "microprocessor wars" started killing off some of the microprocessors. Apparently, with only one major design win, Sequent, the NS 32032 just faded out of existence, and Sequent switched to
Intel microprocessors.
64-bit microchips on the desktop
While 64-bit microprocessor designs have been in use in several markets since the early 1990s, the early 2000s have seen the introduction of 64-bit microchips targeted at the PC market.
With AMD's introduction of the first 64-bit IA-32 backwards-compatible architecture,
AMD64, in September 2003, followed by Intel's own x86-64 chips, the 64-bit desktop era began. Both processors can run 32-bit legacy apps as well as the new 64-bit software. With 64-bit
Windows XP and
Linux that run 64-bit native, the software too is geared to utilise the full power of such processors.
In reality the move to 64-bits is more than just an increase in register size from the ia32 as it also includes a small increase in register quantity for the aging
CISC designs.
The move to 64 bits by
PowerPC processors had been intended since the processors design in the early 90s and was not a major cause of incompatibility. Existing integer registers are extended as are all related data pathways but in common with the IA32 designs both floating point and vector units had been operating at or above 64 bits for several years. Unlike the IA32 no new general purpose registers are added so any performance gained when using the 64-bit mode is minimal.
RISC
In the mid-1980s to early-1990s, a crop of new high-performance
RISC (reduced instruction set computer) microprocessors appeared, which were initially used in special purpose machines and
Unix workstations, but have since become almost universal in all roles except the Intel-standard desktop.
The first commercial design was released by
MIPS Technologies, the 32-bit
R2000 (the R1000 was not released). The R3000 made the design truly practical, and the
R4000 introduced the world's first 64-bit design. Competing projects would result in the
IBM POWER and
Sun SPARC systems, respectively. Soon every major vendor was releasing a RISC design, including the
AT&T CRISP,
AMD 29000,
Intel i860 and
Intel i960,
Motorola 88000,
DEC Alpha and the
HP-PA.
Market forces have "weeded out" many of these designs, leaving the
PowerPC as the main desktop RISC processor, with the SPARC being used in Sun designs only. MIPS continues to supply some
SGI systems, but is primarily used as an embedded design, notably in
Cisco routers. The rest of the original crop of designs have either disappeared, or are about to. Other companies have attacked niches in the market, notably
ARM, originally intended for home computer use but since focussed at the embedded processor market. Today RISC designs based on the MIPS, ARM or PowerPC core power the vast majority of computing devices.
In 64-bit computing,
DEC Alpha,
AMD64,
MIPS,
SPARC,
Power Architecture, and
HP-
Intel Itanium are all popular designs.
Though the term "microprocessor" has traditionally referred to a single- or multi-chip CPU or
System-on-a-chip (SoC), several types of specialized processing devices have followed from the technology. The most common examples are
microcontrollers,
Digital Signal Processors (DSP) and
Graphics processing units (GPU). Many examples of these are either not programmable, or have limited programming facilities. For example, in general GPUs through the 1990s were mostly non-programmable and have only recently gained limited facilities like programmable
vertex shaders. There is no universal consensus on what defines a "microprocessor", but it is usually safe to assume that the term refers to a general-purpose CPU of some sort and not a special-purpose processor unless specifically noted.
The
RCA 1802 had what is called a
static design, meaning that the
clock frequency could be made arbitrarily low, even to 0 Hz, a total stop condition. This let the
Voyager/
Viking/
Galileo spacecraft use minimum electric power for long uneventful stretches of a voyage. Timers and/or sensors would awaken/speed up the processor in time for important tasks, such as navigation updates, attitude control, data acquisition, and radio communication.
See the main article: CPU design.
In 2003, about $44 billion (USD) worth of microprocessors were manufactured and sold. [
1] Although about half of that money was spent on CPUs used in desktop or laptop
personal computers, those count for only about 0.2% of all CPUs sold.
About 55% of all
CPUs sold in the world are
8-bit microcontrollers. Over 2 billion 8-bit
microcontrollers were sold in 1997.[
2]
Less than 10% of all the CPUs sold in the world are
32-bit or more. Of all the 32-bit CPUs sold, about 2% are used in desktop or laptop
personal computers, the rest are sold in household appliances such as toasters, microwaves, vacuum cleaners and televisions."Taken as a whole, the average price for a
microprocessor,
microcontroller, or
DSP is just over $6."[
3]
* AMD
K5,
K6,
K6-2,
K6-III,
Duron,
Athlon,
Athlon XP,
Athlon MP,
Athlon XP-M (Intel
x86 architecture)
* AMD
Athlon 64,
Athlon 64 FX,
Athlon 64 X2,
Opteron,
Sempron,
Turion 64 (
AMD64 architecture)
*
ARM family,
StrongARM,
Intel PXA2xx*
Atmel AVR architecture (purely
microcontrollers)
*
RCA 1802 (aka RCA COSMAC, CDP1802)
*
Cyrix M1,
M2 (Intel
x86 architecture)
*
DEC Alpha*
Intel 4004,
4040*
Intel 8080,
8085,
Zilog Z80*
Intel 8086,
8088,
80186,
80188,
80286,
80386,
80486 (Intel
x86 architecture)
*
Intel Pentium,
Pentium Pro,
Celeron,
Pentium II,
Pentium III,
Xeon,
Pentium 4,
Pentium M,
Pentium D,
Celeron M,
Celeron D (Intel
x86; parents of
IA-64, with
HP PA-RISC)
*
Intel Itanium (
IA-64 architecture)
*
Intel i860,
i960*
MIPS architecture*
Motorola 6800,
MOS Technology 6502,
Motorola 6809*
Motorola 68000 family,
ColdFire*
Motorola 88000 (parents of the PowerPC family, with
POWER)
*
NexGen Nx586 (Intel
x86 architecture)
*
IBM POWER (parents of the PowerPC family, with
88000)
*
NSC 320xx*
OpenCores OpenRISC architecture
*
PA-RISC family (HP, parents to the
IA-64 architecture, with
x86)
*
PowerPC family,
G3,
G4,
G5*
National Semiconductor SC/MP ("scamp")
*
Signetics 2650*
SPARC,
UltraSPARC, UltraSPARC II–IV
*
SuperH family*
Transmeta Crusoe,
Efficeon (
VLIW architectures, Intel
x86 emulator)
*
INMOS Transputer*
VIA's
C3,C7,Eden Series (Intel
x86 architecture)
*
Western Design Center 65xx
*
Central processing unit*
Computer architecture*
Addressing mode*
Digital signal processor*
Microcontroller*
List of microprocessors*
Arithmetic and logical unit*
BIOS*
CISC /
RISC*
Clock rate*
Computer bus*
Computer engineering*
CPU cooling*
CPU core voltage*
CPU design*
CPU locking*
CPU power consumption*
Floating point unit*
Front side bus*
Instruction pipeline*
Instruction set*
Microarchitecture*
Microcode*
microcontroller*
Motherboard*
Superscalar*
Superpipelined*
Wait stateGeneral
*
Great Microprocessors of the Past and Present – By John Bayko
*
Microprocessor history – Hosted by
IBM*
A Simple Course on Microprocessors – By Kenneth Richardson
*
Microprocessor instruction set cards – By
Jonathan Bowen*
CPU-Collection*
HowStuffWorks "How Microprocessors Work"Historical documents
*
TMS1802NC calculator chip press release – Texas Instruments,
17 September 1971*
1973: TI Receives first patent on Single-Chip Microprocessor*
TI Awarded Basic Microcomputer Patent – TI,
17 February 1978 ("microcomputer" to be understood as a single-chip computer; a simple
µC)
*
Important discoveries in microprocessors during 2004 – Hosted by IBM
*
History of the 8080 microprocessorMajor microprocessor designers
*
Advanced Micro Devices*
Intel*
IBM Microelectronics*
AMCC*
Freescale (formerly of
Motorola)
*
ARM*
MIPS Technologies*
TI Semiconductors*
Renesas Technology Corp.*
The Western Design Center*
STMicroelectronics*
2006 microprocessors directory