CSC/ECE 506 Spring 2012/1c 12: Difference between revisions
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[http://www.ece.ncsu.edu/people/solihin Dr. Yan Solihin] defines MISD as "..an architecture in which multiple processing elements execute from different instruction streams, and data is passed from one processing element to the next."[[#References|<sup>[2]</sup>]] He also notes that MISD architectures are restricted to certain types of computations due to the requirement of data-passing between processing elements.[[#References|<sup>[2]</sup>]] Each processing element executes different instructions on the data stream.[[#References|<sup>[3]</sup>]] Every time the data is processed by a processing element, we can always argu that the data is no longer the original data introduced at the start of the stream.[[#References|<sup>[4]</sup>]] | [http://www.ece.ncsu.edu/people/solihin Dr. Yan Solihin] defines MISD as "..an architecture in which multiple processing elements execute from different instruction streams, and data is passed from one processing element to the next."[[#References|<sup>[2]</sup>]] He also notes that MISD architectures are restricted to certain types of computations due to the requirement of data-passing between processing elements.[[#References|<sup>[2]</sup>]] Each processing element executes different instructions on the data stream.[[#References|<sup>[3]</sup>]] Every time the data is processed by a processing element, we can always argu that the data is no longer the original data introduced at the start of the stream.[[#References|<sup>[4]</sup>]] | ||
[[image:Misd Arch Solihin2.jpg|center|upright=1.0\alt=]]] | [[image:Misd Arch Solihin2.jpg|center|upright=1.0\alt=MISD computer architecture outline|From NCSU CSC/ECE 506 Spring 2012 Lecture 1 notes[[#References|<sup>[5]</sup>]]. From the image, we see that the data stream has one clear entrance and exit into the system. Each processing element has access to a collective and/or individual instruction cache.]]] | ||
Revision as of 21:33, 26 January 2012
MISD
Micheal J. Flynn introduced the idea of an MISD (Multiple Instruction, Single Data) computer architectures in his original taxonomy in 1966.[1]
Dr. Yan Solihin defines MISD as "..an architecture in which multiple processing elements execute from different instruction streams, and data is passed from one processing element to the next."[2] He also notes that MISD architectures are restricted to certain types of computations due to the requirement of data-passing between processing elements.[2] Each processing element executes different instructions on the data stream.[3] Every time the data is processed by a processing element, we can always argu that the data is no longer the original data introduced at the start of the stream.[4]
]
MISD Computers
It is widely believed that no actual MISD computer exists in practice. Some arguments exist that pipelined vector processors
References
- Flynn, M. (1972). "Some Computer Organizations and Their Effectiveness". IEEE Trans. Comput. C-21: 948.
- Solihin, Y. (2008). "Fundamentals of Parallel Computer Architecture: Multichip and Multicore Systems". Solihin Publishing & Consulting LLC. C-1: 12.
- CSC 8383 Lecuture 5
- MISD wiki
- ECE506 Spring 2012 Lecture 1