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The Simplified Instructional Computer SIC

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store using their 8-bit ASCII codes. There is no floating-point hardware on SIC. 6 ... code CC set. to indicate. result of. operation. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. SIC ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Simplified Instructional Computer SIC


1
The Simplified Instructional Computer (SIC)
  • Hsiang-Fu Yu
  • National Taipei University of Education

2
Outline
  • The Simplified Instructional Computer (SIC) (Sec.
    1.3)
  • Traditional CISC Machines (Sec. 1.4)
  • RISC Machines (Sec. 1.5)

3
SIC Architecture
  • Two versions
  • SIC
  • SIC/XE (extra equipments or extra expensive)
  • SIC program can be executed on SIC/XE. (upward
    compatible)
  • Memory consists of 8-bit bytes. 3 consecutive
    bytes form a word (24 bits)
  • There are 215 (32K) bytes in the memory

4
Registers
  • There are 5 registers
  • Each is 24 bits in length

5
Data Format
  • Integer
  • 24-bit binary numbers
  • 2s complement representation is used for
    negative numbers
  • Character
  • store using their 8-bit ASCII codes
  • There is no floating-point hardware on SIC

6
Instruction Format
  • All machine instructions on SIC has the following
    24-bit format
  • Only two addressing modes

X is used to indicate indexed-addressing mode
7
Instruction Set
  • Load and store registers
  • LDA, LDX, STA, STX
  • Integer arithmetic
  • ADD, SUB, MUL, DIV, all involve register A and a
    word in memory
  • Comparison
  • COMP, involve register A and a word in memory
  • set a condition code CC to indicate the compare
    result

8
Instruction Set (cont.)
  • Conditional jump
  • JLE, JEQ, JGT, etc.
  • test the setting of CC and jump accordingly
  • Subroutine linkage
  • JSUB
  • jump to the subroutine, placing the return
    address in register L
  • RSUB
  • return by jumping to the address contained in
    register L

9
Input and Output
  • One byte at a time to or from the rightmost 8
    bits of register A
  • Each device has a unique 8-bit ID code
  • Test device (TD)
  • test if a device is ready to send or receive a
    byte of data
  • Read data (RD)
  • read a byte from the device to register A
  • Write data (WD)
  • write a byte from register A to the device

10
SIC/XE Architecture
  • Memory size
  • 1 megabytes (220 bytes)
  • An address (20 bits) cannot be fitted into a
    15-bit field as in SIC Standard
  • Lead to changes in instruction formats and
    addressing modes
  • Extra registers

11
Data Format
  • The same as that of SIC
  • There is a floating-point data type with the
    following format
  • fraction is between 0 and 1
  • exponent is between 0 and 2047
  • Zero is presented as all 0

(-1)sfraction2(exponent-1024)
12
Instruction Formats
Formats 1 and 2 do not reference memory at all
Format 1 (1 byte)
Format 2 (2 bytes)
Format 3 (3 bytes)
e 0
Format 4 (4 bytes)
e 1
Bit e distinguishes between formats 3 and 4 Large
memory extends addressing capacity
13
Addressing Modes
b1, p0, TA(B)disp (0?disp ?4095)
b0, p1, TA(PC)disp (-2048?disp ?2047)
14
Addressing Modes (cont.)
Format 3 b0, p0, TAdisp (0?disp ?4095)
Format 4 b0, p0, TAaddr
15
Addressing Modes (cont.)
  • Indexed addressing mode

TA(X)disp
TA(X)disp(PC)
TA(X)disp(B)
16
Addressing Modes (cont.)
For formats 3 and 4
  • Immediate addressing mode (n 0, i 1)
  • The target address is used as the operand
  • Indirect addressing mode (n 1, i 0)
  • The word at the location given by the target
    address is fetched
  • The value contained in this word is then used as
    the address of the operand value
  • Simple addressing mode
  • The target address is taken as the location of
    the operand
  • (n 1, i 1) used by SIC/XE
  • (n 0, i 0) used by SIC

Indexed addressing cannot be used with immediate
or indirect modes.
17
4 Format 4 instruction D Direct-addressing
instruction , i.e., non-relative addressing
, b 0 and p 0 A Assembler selects either
program-counter relative or base-
relative mode S Compatible with SIC
18
PC-relative simple addressing (PC)
disp Base-relative indexed simple addressing (B)
disp (X) PC-relative indirect addressing
(PC) disp Immediate addressing disp SIC simple
addressing b/p/e disp Simple addressing addr
All of these instructions are LDA.
19
Instruction Set
  • LDB and STB
  • Floating-point operations
  • ADDF, SUBF, MULF, DIVF
  • Register move
  • RMO
  • Register-to-register operations
  • ADDR, SUBR, MULR, DIVR
  • Supervisor call for generating system calls into
    the operating system
  • SVC
  • I/O channel operation similar to DMA
  • SIO start, TIO test, HIO halt

20
Complete Instruction Set
P privileged instruction X available
only on XE F floating- point
Instruction C condition code CC set to
indicate result of operation
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25
SIC Programming Examples
Immediate addressing makes the program run faster
because it need not fetch five from the memory.
26
SIC Programming Example (Fig. 1.3a)
BETA lt- (ALPHA INCR - 1) DELTA lt- (GAMMA
INCR - 1)
27
SIC/XE Programming Example (Fig. 1.3b)
This program will execute faster because it need
not load INCR from memory each time when INCR is
needed.
28
SIC Programming Example (Fig. 1.4a)
  • Looping and indexing copy one string to another

29
SIC/XE Programming Example (Fig. 1.4b)
This program will execute faster because TIXR
need not compare the index value to a memory
variable.
30
SIC Programming Example (Fig. 1.5a)
Gamma lt- Alpha Beta
31
SIC/XE Programming Example (Fig. 1.5b)
This program will execute faster because it uses
register-to-register add to reduce memory
accesses.
32
Input and Output Example
33
SIC Programming Example (Fig. 1.7a)
Read 100 words into the record buffer
34
SIC/XE Programming Example (Fig. 1.7b)
Use TIXR makes this program run faster
35
Reduced Instruction Set Computer (RISC) Machines
  • RISC system
  • Instruction
  • Standard, fixed instruction format
  • Single-cycle execution of most instructions
  • Memory access is available only for load and
    store instruction
  • Other instructions are register-to-register
    operations
  • A small number of machine instructions, and
    instruction format
  • A large number of general-purpose registers
  • A small number of addressing modes

36
Some RISC machines
  • SPARC family
  • PowerPC family
  • Cray T3E
  • ARM
  • MIPS

37
Traditional (CISC) Machines
  • Complex Instruction Set Computers (CISC)
  • Complicated instruction set
  • Different instruction formats and lengths
  • Many different addressing modes
  • Examples
  • VAX
  • Intel x86 Processors
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