The ARM Cortex-A12 is a 32-bit processor core licensed by ARM Holdings implementing the ARMv7-A architecture. It provides up to 4 cache-coherent cores. The Cortex-A12 is a successor to the Cortex-A9.[2]
General information | |
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Designed by | ARM Holdings |
Cache | |
L1 cache | 32–64 KiB I, 32 KiB D |
L2 cache | 256 KiB–8 MiB (configurable with L2 cache controller) |
Architecture and classification | |
Instruction set | ARMv7-A |
Physical specifications | |
Cores |
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Products, models, variants | |
Product code name |
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History | |
Predecessor | ARM Cortex-A9 |
Successor | ARM Cortex-A17 |
ARM renamed A12 as a variant of Cortex-A17 since the second revision of the core in early 2014, because they were indistinguishable in performance.[3][4]
Overview
editARM claims that the Cortex-A12 core is 40 percent more powerful than the Cortex-A9 core.[5] New features not found in the Cortex-A9 include hardware virtualization and 40-bit Large Physical Address Extensions (LPAE) addressing. It was announced as supporting big.LITTLE,[6] however shortly afterwards the ARM Cortex-A17 was announced as the upgraded version with that capability.[7]
Key features of the Cortex-A12 core are:[8]
- Out-of-order speculative issue superscalar execution pipeline giving 3.00 DMIPS/MHz/core.
- NEON SIMD instruction set extension.
- High performance VFPv4 floating point unit.
- Thumb-2 instruction set encoding reduces the size of programs with little impact on performance.
- TrustZone security extensions.
- L2 cache controller (0-8 MB).
- Multi-core processing.
- 40-bit Large Physical Address Extensions (LPAE) addressing up to 1 TB of RAM.
- Hardware virtualization support.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "What core follows ARM's A12?". 15 January 2014.
- ^ "ARM Cortex-A12 Processor". Arm.com.
- ^ Anand Lal Shimpi (11 February 2014). "ARM Cortex A17: An Evolved Cortex A12 for the Mainstream in 2015". AnandTech. Retrieved 30 September 2014.
- ^ Stefan Rosinger (1 October 2014). "ARM Cortex-A17 / Cortex-A12 processor update". ARM Connected Community.
- ^ "ARM launches new Cortex-A12 processor with new Mali-T622 GPU and Mali-V500 video processing". Archived from the original on 26 August 2013. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
- ^ ARM Targets 580 Million Mid-Range Mobile Devices with New Suite of IP
- ^ Anand Lal Shimpi (11 February 2014). "ARM Cortex A17: An Evolved Cortex A12 for the Mainstream in 2015". Anandtech.
- ^ "Cortex-A12 Processor Specifications". ARM.
External links
edit- ARM Holdings