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Handheld Devices (portable but still explicit usage)

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Handheld Devices (portable but still explicit usage) Laptops Personal Digital Assistants (Palm, PocketPC) TabletPC Smart Phones – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Handheld Devices (portable but still explicit usage)


1
Handheld Devices(portable but still explicit
usage)
  • Laptops
  • Personal Digital Assistants (Palm, PocketPC)
  • TabletPC
  • Smart Phones

2
Palm VIIx
  • Size 5.25" x 3.25" x 0.75"
  • Weight 6.7 oz.
  • Batteries 2 AAA
  • Processor 16 MHz Motorola Dragonball EZ
  • Memory 8 MB
  • PalmOS Version 3.5
  • Flash ROM Yes
  • Expandability None
  • Price 449
  • Additional Features Wireless Internet Access

3
DaVinci
4
Palm IIIx
  • Motorola MC68EZ328 Dragonball processor. On a
    single chip includes
  • 68000 CPU
  • Real-time clock
  • PLL clock generator
  • Interrupt controller
  • General purpose I/O ports, DRAM controller, UART,
    Audio output, LCD controller

5
Palm IIIx (contd.)
  • 68000 CPU
  • CISC core (1978 design)
  • 4 cycles per instruction typical
  • No MMU (no protection!)
  • DRAM Memory
  • 4MB, implemented as two 2MB chips
  • 60ns access latency

6
Palm IIIx (contd.)
  • Flash Memory
  • One Fujitsu 29LV160B-90 2MB flash chip
  • Divided into 35 sectors that can be individuall
    erased
  • 90 cycles for reads
  • Stores the boot code, Palm OS, and the
    non-volatile storage needed by applications

7
Palm IIIx (contd.)
  • Peripherals on Dragonball chip
  • LCD controller
  • Has a 4-bit interface to screen
  • Screen is 160160 pixels
  • 1 is black and 0 is white
  • UART
  • For serial cradle connector or IRDAs
  • SPI (Serial Peripheral Interface)
  • Synchronous port for interaction with
    touch-screen A/D converter
  • PWM
  • Drives a transistor audio amplifier and in turn a
    piezoelectric speaker (8 bit audio streams)

8
iPAQ H3600 Hardware
  • Intel StrongArm SA-1110 (206 MHz)
  • 32 MB of SDRAM
  • 32 MB of Flash ROM
  • 4096 color reflective LCD
  • Touch panel input
  • Stereo audio output (to a jack)
  • RS-232 port, USB port, expansion pack interface

9
StrongARM SA-1110
10
StrongARM system integration
11
StrongARM SA-1110
  • 2.1 MIPS, 206 Mhz
  • Normal Mode 240 mW _at_ 1.55V/133 Mhz, 400 mW _at_
    1.75V/206 MHz
  • 32 way set associatve caches
  • 16 KB I-cache, 8 KB write-back D-cache
  • 32 entry I and D MMUs
  • Read/Write buffer

12
Additional features in chipset
  • Memory controller for ROM, flash, DRAM (SDRAM),
    SRAM
  • LCD controller (1/2/4 bit gray scale or 8/12/16
    bit color)
  • UART, IrDA
  • Touch-screen, audio port
  • 6 channel DMA controller
  • 2-slot PCMCIA controller, 12 Mbps USB controller
  • 28 general purpose I/O ports, Interrupt
    controller
  • Real-time clock with interrupt capability
  • Power modes Normal, Idle, Sleep

13
Memory Map
  • Four main partitions of 1GB each
  • 0x0 to 0x3FFFFFFF
  • 4238 MB blocks for static memory devices (ROM,
    SRAM, Flash)
  • 2256 MB blocks for PCMCIA Interface (socket 0
    and socket 1)
  • 0x40000000 to 0x7fffffff
  • 2128 MB blocks for variable latency I/O devices
  • 768 MB of reserved space

14
Memory Map (contd.)
  • 0x80000000 to 0xbfffffff
  • Contains all on-chip registers (peripherals regs,
    sys control regs, memory regs, LCD and DMA regs)
  • 0xc0000000 to 0xffffffff
  • 4128MB of DRAM
  • 1128MB mapped within memory controller.
  • 384MB of reserved space

15
  • Two crystals 32.768 Khz and 3.6864 Mhz
  • Several frequencies can be generated from these
    by setting CCF (clock config. field) of power
    manager phase locked loop config. register (PPCR)
  • Clock frequencies 59, 73.7, 88.5, 103.2, 118.0,
    132.7, 147.5, 162.2, 176.2, 191.7, 206.4, 221.2
    MHz
  • Remember Power CV2F
  • 150us transition period when no response to
    external events and OS timer is stopped
  • Clock rates of external devices should also be
    adjusted.

16
Memory Management
  • Separate TLBs for instruction and data
  • Each has 32 entries that can each map
  • Segment (1 MB)
  • Large page (8 KB)
  • Small Page (4 KB)
  • Round-robin TLB replacement
  • Data TLB Support (Flush all, Flush entry)
  • Instruction TLB Support (Flush all)

17
Instruction Cache
  • 16 KB, 32-way associative with 32 byte blocks
  • Replacement is round robin within set
  • I-cache operates with virtual addresses (both
    index and tag)
  • Supports flush-all function

18
Data Cache
  • 8KB, 32-way associative with 32 byte blocks.
    Round robin replacement in set
  • Allocate only on loads
  • Flush all, flush entry and copyback entry
    functions
  • Works with virtual addresses
  • 2 dirty bits per block for write-backs
  • In addition, a mini-data cache, which can be used
    to hold data that can thrash in main data cache
  • Mini data cache 512 byte, 2-way

19
Data Cache vs Mini Data Cache
  • Data can reside only in one of them and are
    searched in parallel
  • Operation of load/store depends on B (bufferable)
    and C (cacheable) bits in MMU
  • If C1, data can be placed in either Normal or
    mini based on B bit for a load
  • If B0 (and C1), load miss places block in mini
    cache
  • If B1 (and C1), load miss places block in
    normal cache.

20
Write Buffer
  • Can avoid stalling on writes
  • Upto 8 blocks of data of 1 to 16 bytes at
    different addresses
  • In the common case, writes are not merged in the
    write buffer

21
Read Buffer
  • Four entry read buffer capable of loading 1,4 or
    8 words per entry
  • Allows software to preload data into them for use
    at a later time without blocking the processor
  • Software can also specify which entry to use.
    Portion of a block can be in one entry while rest
    can be in another entry but a word can be in
    only one entry.
  • Data can be simultaneously present in D-cache and
    Read buffer. Data is returned from Read buffer
    and software has to handle coherence issues.
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