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- From: lindsay+@cs.cmu.edu (Donald Lindsay)
- Newsgroups: comp.arch
- Subject: Re: DEC Alpha architecture issues
- Message-ID: <By7CLG.L2q.2@cs.cmu.edu>
- Date: 24 Nov 92 04:03:15 GMT
- Article-I.D.: cs.By7CLG.L2q.2
- References: <1992Nov22.043852.764@megadata.mega.oz.au> <By4pEI.8r5.2@cs.cmu.edu> <VO68G1K@netmbx.netmbx.de>
- Sender: news@cs.cmu.edu (Usenet News System)
- Organization: School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon
- Lines: 20
- Nntp-Posting-Host: gandalf.cs.cmu.edu
-
- gerhard@netmbx.netmbx.de (Gerhard Hoffmann) writes:
- >In article <By4pEI.8r5.2@cs.cmu.edu> lindsay+@cs.cmu.edu (Donald Lindsay) writes:
- >>- PALcode is fetched from the I-cache, not from ROM.
- >
- >This doesn't mean anything. Early low-end /360 machines had their
- >microcode in main store, and still it was microcode.
-
- IBM called it microcode, but I don't. In fact, they built a small
- minicomputer, and then wrote a software interpreter which took 360
- instructions and did them. Calling that "microcode" was more a
- political statement than a technical one. Admittedly, some microcode
- schemes are more encoded than others: but this "vertical microcode"
- has abandoned all the things that the word "microcode" usually means,
- except one. [That users be prohibited from writing in it!]
-
- PALcode is far more analogous to supervisor state than to microcode.
- If people want to reply that supervisor state smells like microcode,
- then I will hold my tongue and let them.
- --
- Don D.C.Lindsay Carnegie Mellon Computer Science
-