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Compact, low-power 32-bit RISC CPU

Overview

The eSi-3200 32-bit CPU is the mid-range member in the eSi-RISC family of processor cores. It is targeted specifically for low-power applications that require more computational power or a larger address space than is provided by the 16-bit eSi-1600 and that are able to be implemented using on-chip memory.


The cacheless memory architecture of the eSi-3200 allows for deterministic performance, making it particularly suitable for hard real-time control applications. It uses a modified-Harvard memory architecture allowing for simultaneous instruction and data fetch. The 5-stage pipeline allows GHz clock frequencies to be achieved.


The eSi-3200's instruction set includes everything you would expect in a high-performance processor. There are a number of optional application specific instructions and addressing modes. A set of IEEE-754 compliant single-precision floating point instructions are available. Integer arithmetic instructions include a full 64 multiply and accumulate and divide. Bit manipulation instructions such as bitfield extract and insert, count leading zeros, population count, find first set and bit reverse can be included. Integer square root, absolute value, min/max, CRC and parity are also available. 32-bit SIMD instructions with 16-bit elements exploit data parallelism and reduce loop counts. Wait-for-interrupt instructions allow fast entry to low power states, enabling clock and power gating.


For those applications that require extreme performance or ultra low power operation, user-defined instructions and registers can be implemented. Instructions are encoded in either 16 or 32-bits, with all of the commonly used instructions being encoded in 16-bits, maximizing code density and minimizing instruction fetch power consumption.


The processor supports both user and supervisor operating modes, with privileged instructions and memory areas via the optional MPU, to allow an O/S kernel to be fully protected from user applications.


Hardware debug facilities include hardware breakpoints, watchpoints, trace, null pointer detection and single stepping for fast debugging of ROM, FLASH and RAM based programs.

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