Achieving cache coherence in a MIPS32 multicore design
Embedded.com (08/17/08, 12:00:00 PM EDT)
Historically, memory coherence in multiprocessor systems was often achieved through bus "snooping," where each core was connected to a common multitier bus and was able to snoop on memory-access traffic of processor peers to regulate the coherence status of individual cache lines. For that, each core maintained the coherence status of L1 cache lines locally and posted status changes to peers via the common bus.
The increasing size and complexity of the system-on-a-chip (SoC) led to restructuring of the multitier-bus philosophy in favor of localized point-to-point connections with centralized traffic routing. This configuration enabled speed and power improvements on now localized bus segments due to reduced load and segment length. Also, bus-contention problems eased, and throughput increased for the localized data exchange. In response to this trend in system architecture, the Open Core Protocol (OCP) standard emerged to consolidate this design philosophy. Further, emergence of IP-provider business models catalyzed the standardization of IP interconnect and design methods to facilitate design reuse centered on an open standard.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- LPDDR6/5X/5 PHY V2 - Intel 18A-P
- MIPI SoundWire I3S Peripheral IP
- LPDDR6/5X/5 Controller IP
- Post-Quantum ML-KEM IP Core
- MIPI SoundWire I3S Manager IP
Related White Papers
- Multi-core multi-threaded SoCs pose debugging hurdles
- Realising the Full Potential of Multi-core Designs
- Realising the Full Potential of Multi-core Designs
- Bringing Order to Multi-Core Processor Chaos
Latest White Papers
- Attack on a PUF-based Secure Binary Neural Network
- BBOPlace-Bench: Benchmarking Black-Box Optimization for Chip Placement
- FD-SOI: A Cyber-Resilient Substrate Against Laser Fault Injection—The Future Platform for Secure Automotive Electronics
- In-DRAM True Random Number Generation Using Simultaneous Multiple-Row Activation: An Experimental Study of Real DRAM Chips
- SPAD: Specialized Prefill and Decode Hardware for Disaggregated LLM Inference