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CISC Vs RISC

The document compares CISC and RISC processor architectures. CISC processors were designed to have complex instructions that performed multiple operations, while RISC processors emphasized simpler instructions that could execute faster. Over time, RISC designs gained popularity for their ability to pipeline instructions and achieve high clock speeds, though some applications still perform better on CISC processors. The key differences are that CISC focuses on hardware with multi-step instructions and small code size, while RISC emphasizes software and single-clock reduced instructions with larger code size.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
65 views

CISC Vs RISC

The document compares CISC and RISC processor architectures. CISC processors were designed to have complex instructions that performed multiple operations, while RISC processors emphasized simpler instructions that could execute faster. Over time, RISC designs gained popularity for their ability to pipeline instructions and achieve high clock speeds, though some applications still perform better on CISC processors. The key differences are that CISC focuses on hardware with multi-step instructions and small code size, while RISC emphasizes software and single-clock reduced instructions with larger code size.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CISC vs RISC

In the early days of the computer industry, high level programming languages were not available
and most of the work was done in assembly language. Therefore CPU designers tried to make
instructions that would do as much work as possible. The general thinking at that time was that
hardware design was easier than compiler design, so large parts of the complexity of the software
went into the hardware (and/or microcode). This design philosophy was named Complex Instruction
Set Computer (CISC).

With the advent of higher level languages, a new design strategy started to gain more and more
popularity: instructions which "do less" may still provide high performances if this simplicity can be
utilized to make instructions execute very quickly. The focus on "reduced instructions" led to the
resulting machine being called a Reduced Instruction Set Computer (RISC).

The goal was to make instructions so simple that they could easily be pipelined, in order to achieve a single
clock throughput at high frequencies.

Currently, many processors are called RISC because there is a perception tat RISC is faster than CISC. This can
be confusing because many of the processors available are identified as being "RISC-like", but are, in fact, CISC
processors. You must be aware that in some applications, CISC processor can execute code faster than RISC
processors, or execute applications that a RISC processor cannot.

Characteristics of a RISC architecture:

• Emphasis on software;
• Single-clock, reduced instruction only;
• Uniform instruction format, using a single word with the opcode in the same bit positions in
every instruction, demanding less decoding;
• Identical general purpose registers, allowing any register to be used in any context,
simplifying compiler design;
• Simple addressing modes. Complex addressing performed via sequences of arithmetic and/or
load-store operations;
• Typically larger code sizes;
• Few data types in hardware;

Characteristics of a CISC architecture:

• Emphasis on hardware;
• Includes multi-clock complex instructions;
• Small code sizes;
• Complex data types in hardware; some CISCs have byte string instructions, or support
complex numbers;

The CISC approach attempts to minimize the number of instructions per program, sacrificing the
number of cycles per instruction. RISC does the opposite, reducing the cycles per instruction at the
cost of the number of instructions per program.

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