vote up 2 vote down star
1

I'm looking for a good book on how modern microprocessors are designed and work as I would like to increase my understanding of what makes them tick. Something that covers pipelines, superscalar architectures, caches etc. A book that is suitable for a programmer with several years of experience and has done and understands assembly programming and machine language, so basically not "CPUs for Dummies" or anything such.

What books do people who design today's processors read for instance?

flag

4 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

This is a good entry level text:

http://www.amazon.com/Computer-Architecture-Quantitative-Approach-Kaufmann/dp/1558605967

Also known to CPU architects as "Hennessy and Patterson" (the authors of the original).

link|flag
Looks really good, thanks! – David Holm Jan 26 at 16:03
I learnt from this - was going to put exactly the same thing :) – ShuggyCoUk Jan 26 at 16:04
This is the reference for design of modern CPU architecture. I don't think it's "suitable for a programmer with several years of experience and has done and understands assembly programming and machine language" - it's going to be a hard read for you, but if you push through it you'll get it. – Adam Davis Jan 26 at 17:05
I used this is in an advanced processor design course. It's pretty good. :) David Patterson also has some of his course lectures on the Berkeley Webcast. – BobbyShaftoe Jan 26 at 23:04
vote up 1 vote down

The only book I've read on the subject is Computer Organization and Architecture. It's a difficult read in some areas (any book on the subject likely is), but I believe it covers everything that you're looking for.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Inside the Machine

This is an excellent book with fantastic illustrations. It covers in detail all three of the areas that you mention.

From their site:

Inside the Machine, from the co-founder of the highly respected Ars Technica website, explains how microprocessors operate—what they do and how they do it. The book uses analogies, full-color diagrams, and clear language to convey the ideas that form the basis of modern computing. After discussing computers in the abstract, the book examines specific microprocessors from Intel, IBM, and Motorola, from the original models up through today's leading processors. It contains the most comprehensive and up-to-date information available (online or in print) on Intel’s latest processors: the Pentium M, Core, and Core 2 Duo. Inside the Machine also explains technology terms and concepts that readers often hear but may not fully understand, such as "pipelining," "L1 cache," "main memory," "superscalar processing," and "out-of-order execution."

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

The Hennessey and Patterson book is used heavily also.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.