ARM9

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ARM9T
Instruction set ARM (32-bit),
Thumb (16-bit) (alternate).
ARM Architecture:
ARMv4T
ARM9E
Instruction set ARM (32-bit),
Thumb (16-bit) (alternate).
ARM Architecture:,
ARMv5TE
ARM9EJ
Instruction set ARM (32-bit),
Thumb (16-bit) (alternate),
Jazelle (8-bit) (alternate).
ARM Architecture:,
ARMv5TEJ

The ARM9 is a group of older 32-bit RISC ARM processor cores licensed by ARM Holdings.

Overview

With this design generation, ARM moved from a von Neumann architecture (Princeton architecture) to a Harvard architecture with separate instruction and data buses (and caches), significantly increasing its potential speed.[1] Most silicon chips integrating these cores will package them as modified Harvard architecture chips, combining the two address buses on the other side of separated CPU caches and tightly coupled memories.

There are two subfamilies, implementing different ARM architecture versions.

Differences from ARM7 cores

Key improvements over ARM7 cores, enabled by spending more transistors, include:[2]

  • Decreased heat production and lower overheating risk.
  • Clock frequency improvements. Shifting from a three-stage pipeline to a five-stage one lets the clock speed be approximately doubled, on the same silicon fabrication process.
  • Cycle count improvements. Many unmodified ARM7 binaries were measured as taking about 30% fewer cycles to execute on ARM9 cores. Key improvements include:
    • Faster loads and stores; many instructions now cost just one cycle. This is helped by both the modified Harvard architecture (reducing bus and cache contention) and the new pipeline stages.
    • Exposing pipeline interlocks, enabling compiler optimizations to reduce blockage between stages.

Additionally, some ARM9 cores incorporate "Enhanced DSP" instructions, such as a multiply-accumulate, to support more efficient implementations of digital signal processing algorithms.

Switching to a Harvard architecture entailed a non-unified cache, so that instruction fetches do not evict data (and vice versa). ARM9 cores have separate data and address bus signals, which chip designers use in various ways. In most cases they connect at least part of the address space in von Neumann style, used for both instructions and data, usually to an AHB interconnect connecting to a DRAM interface and an External Bus Interface usable with NOR flash memory. Such hybrids are no longer pure Harvard architecture processors.

Cores

Year ARM9 Cores
1998 ARM9TDMI
1998 ARM940T
1999 ARM9E-S
1999 ARM966E-S
2000 ARM920T
2000 ARM922T
2000 ARM946E-S
2001 ARM9EJ-S
2001 ARM926EJ-S
2004 ARM968E-S
2006 ARM996HS

The ARM MPCore family of multicore processors support software written using either the asymmetric (AMP) or symmetric (SMP) multiprocessor programming paradigms. For AMP development, each central processor unit within the MPCore may be viewed as an independent processor and as such can follow traditional single processor development strategies.[3]

ARM9TDMI

ARM9TDMI is a successor to the popular ARM7TDMI core, and is also based on the ARMv4T architecture. Cores based on it support both 32-bit ARM and 16-bit Thumb instruction sets and include:

  • ARM920T with 16 KB each of I/D cache and an MMU
  • ARM922T with 8 KB each of I/D cache and an MMU
  • ARM940T with cache and a Memory Protection Unit (MPU)

ARM9E and ARM9EJ

ARM9E, and its ARM9EJ sibling, implement the basic ARM9TDMI pipeline, but add support for the ARMv5TE architecture, which includes some DSP-esque instruction set extensions. In addition, the multiplier unit width has been doubled, halving the time required for most multiplication operations. They support 32-bit, 16-bit, and sometimes 8-bit instruction sets.

  • ARM926EJ-S with ARM Jazelle technology, which enables the direct execution of 8-bit Java bytecode in hardware, and an MMU
  • ARM946
  • ARM966
  • ARM968

Chips

Nintendo DSi has a chip with an ARM9 and ARM7 cores
Lego Mindstorms EV3 brick has an ARM9 TI Sitara AM1x

Documentation

The amount of documentation for all ARM chips is daunting, especially for newcomers. The documentation for microcontrollers from past decades would easily be inclusive in a single document, but as chips have evolved so has the documentation grown. The total documentation is especially hard to grasp for all ARM chips since it consists of documents from the IC manufacturer and documents from CPU core vendor (ARM Holdings).

A typical top-down documentation tree is: high-level marketing slides, datasheet for the exact physical chip, a detailed reference manual that describes common peripherals and other aspects of physical chips within the same series, reference manual for the exact ARM core processor within the chip, reference manual for the ARM architecture of the core which includes detailed description of all instruction sets.

Documentation tree (top to bottom)
  1. IC manufacturer marketing slides.
  2. IC manufacturer datasheets.
  3. IC manufacturer reference manuals.
  4. ARM core reference manuals.
  5. ARM architecture reference manuals.

IC manufacturer has additional documents, including: evaluation board user manuals, application notes, getting started with development software, software library documents, errata, and more.

See also

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. "Performance of the ARM9TDMI and ARM9E-S cores compared to the ARM7TDMI core", Issue 1.0, dated 9 February 2000, ARM Ltd.
  3. MPCore Sample Code
  4. STR9 Website; STMicroelectronics.

External links

ARM Holdings
Quick Reference Cards