Computer Architecture CPSC 321 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Computer Architecture CPSC 321

Description:

One of the first calculation tools was the abacus, presumably invented sometime ... The calculation devices weren't a commercial success pencil and paper was ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:39
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 21
Provided by: faculty
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Computer Architecture CPSC 321


1
Computer ArchitectureCPSC 321
  • Andreas Klappenecker

2
Course Contents
3
Course Contents
  • History
  • Organization of a computer
  • Assembly language
  • Design of a computer
  • Verilog
  • Future architectures

4
Syllabus
  • Two midterm exams 50
  • Assignments and quizzes 20
  • Projects 30

5
Early History
One of the first calculation tools was the
abacus, presumably invented sometime between
1000-500 B.C.
6
Early History
  • around 1600, John Napier invents the Napier
    bones, a tool that helps in calculations
  • (photo
    courtesy of IBM)
  • Napier also invents the logarithm
  • 1621, William Oughtred invents the slide rule
    that exploit Napiers logarithms to assist in
    calculations

7
Early History
  • 1625 Wilhelm Schickard invents a mechanical
    device to add, subtract, multiply and divide
    numbers
  • 1640 Blaise Pascal invents his Arithmetic Machine
    (which could only add)
  • (photo
    courtesy of IBM)
  • 1671 Wilhelm von Leibniz invents the Step
    Reckoner, a device that allows to perform
    additions, subtractions, multiplications,
    divisions, and evaluation of square roots (by
    stepped additions)

8
Early History
  • Charles Babbage proposes in 1822 a machine to
    calculate tables for logarithms and trigonometric
    functions, called the Difference Engine.
  • Before completing the machine, he invents in 1833
    the more sophisticated Analytic Engine that uses
    Jacquard punch cards to control the arithmetic
    calculations
  • The machine is programmable, has storage
    capabilities, and control flow mechanisms it is
    a general purpose computer.
  • The Analytic Engine was never completed.
  • Augusta Ada Lovelace writes the first program for
    the Analytical Engine (to calculate Bernoulli
    numbers). Some consider her as the first
    programmer.

9
Computing Needs?
  • The calculation devices werent a commercial
    success pencil and paper was cheap and fast
    enough.
  • The 1890 US census demanded larger data
    processing power, because more questions were
    asked.
  • Hermann Hollerith provided the data processing
    equipment.
  • Holleriths company later became a core part of
    IBM.
  • (Photo courtesy of the IEEE Computer Society)

10
Analogue Computing Rules! (Oops?)
  • The digital computing methods of Babbage and
    Hollerith did not lead directly to the modern
    computer.
  • In fact, analogue computing devices were much
    more common in 1900-1930, especially for
    scientific computations.
  • In 1930, Vannevar Bush (MIT) constructed a large
    differential analyzer that was capable of
    integration and differentiation.
  • The common conception was that analogue computing
    has many advantages over digital computation (and
    one finds constructions of analogue computers
    until the 1960s).

11
Konrad Zuse
Konrad Zuse next to the replica of his Z1
computer (Technisches Museum, Munich).
  • In 1935, Konrad Zuse designs a special purpose
    electro-mechanical computer, the Z1. He
    constructs the computer in 1936-1938 in the
    living room of his parents in Berlin, Germany.

12
Z1
  • The Z1 computer was clocked at 1 Hz. The memory
    consists of 64 words with 22 bits. Input and
    output is done by a punch tape reader and a punch
    tape writer.
  • The computer has two registers with 22 bits and
    is able to perform additions and subtractions (it
    is not a general purpose computer).

13
Z3
(Art and photo courtesy of Horst Zuse)
  • Zuse constructed the Z3, a fully programmable
    general purpose computer, in 1939-1941.
    Remarkably, it contained a binary floating point
    arithmetic. It was clocked at 5.33 Hz, based on
    relays, and had 64 words of 22 bits.
  • The small memory did not allow for storage of the
    program.

14
World War II
  • Remarkably, Zuse did not profit from the war. In
    fact, his funding was pulled because it seemed
    unlikely that his computer will be finished
    before the war ends.
  • Computational methods were relevant to break
    ciphers
  • Bletchley Park (GB) developed and used devices to
    crack crypts of the German Enigma cipher
  • Calculating tables for projectile trajectories
  • Eckert and Mauchly (US) got funding to develop a
    computer to calculate tables

15
Atanasoff
  • John Vincent Atanasoff and his graduate student
    Clifford Berry developed in 1938-1942 a special
    purpose computer that was able to solve systems
    of linear equations.
  • The machine was not programmable, but it
    performed all calculations with electronics and
    avoided electro-mechanical elements such as
    relays.

(Photo and artwork courtesy of Iowa State
University) It is not a general purpose
computer, but Iowa State University tries to
paint a different picture.
16
Mark 1 Colossus
(picture courtesy of Wikipedia encyclopedia)
  • 1943-44 Mark 1 Colossus
  • memory based on vacuum tubes
  • special purpose machine, not Turing complete
  • but it had some flexibility
  • used in Bletchley Park to break the fish cipher

17
ENIAC
  • All-electronic general purpose computer based on
    vacuum tubes
  • Intended to calculate ballistic firing tables
  • Designed by Presper Eckert and John Mauchly
  • Designed and constructed during 1943-1946
  • Programming by rewiring
  • 5000 additions per second, 357 multiplications
    per second, and 38 divisions per second
  • Decimal, not binary!

(photo courtesy of the U.S. army)
18
EDVAC
  • It was the first stored program computer ever
    designed
  • (but other stored program computers were
    completed earlier, namely an experimental machine
    at Manchester University, EDSAC at Cambridge
    University, an Australian machine )
  • The stored program design is usually attributed
    to von Neumann, although Zuse formulate this
    concept already in 1936 in a patent applications
    (patent rejected).
  • Eckert and Mauchly were joined by von Neumann in
    the design of EDVAC.
  • First draft of EDVAC by von Neumann
  • http//www.virtualtravelog.net/entries/2003-08-The
    FirstDraft.pdf

19
Where are we headed?
  • In general, a computer consists of the following
    components

Datapath
Input
Memory
Output
Control
20
Further Reading
  • Scott McCartney Eniac, Berkeley Books, New York,
    1999
  • von Neumanns design of EDVAC
  • Patterson, Hennessy, 2nd edition, Chapter 1.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com