Book Image

Modern Computer Architecture and Organization

By : Jim Ledin
Book Image

Modern Computer Architecture and Organization

By: Jim Ledin

Overview of this book

Are you a software developer, systems designer, or computer architecture student looking for a methodical introduction to digital device architectures but overwhelmed by their complexity? This book will help you to learn how modern computer systems work, from the lowest level of transistor switching to the macro view of collaborating multiprocessor servers. You'll gain unique insights into the internal behavior of processors that execute the code developed in high-level languages and enable you to design more efficient and scalable software systems. The book will teach you the fundamentals of computer systems including transistors, logic gates, sequential logic, and instruction operations. You will learn details of modern processor architectures and instruction sets including x86, x64, ARM, and RISC-V. You will see how to implement a RISC-V processor in a low-cost FPGA board and how to write a quantum computing program and run it on an actual quantum computer. By the end of this book, you will have a thorough understanding of modern processor and computer architectures and the future directions these architectures are likely to take.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Fundamentals of Computer Architecture
8
Section 2: Processor Architectures and Instruction Sets
14
Section 3: Applications of Computer Architecture

Warehouse-scale computing architecture

Providers of large-scale computing capabilities and networking services to the public and to sprawling organizations, such as governments, research universities, and major corporations, often aggregate computing capabilities in large buildings, each containing perhaps thousands of computers. To make the most effective use of these capabilities, it is not sufficient to consider the collection of computers in a warehouse-scale computer (WSC) as simply a large number of individual computers. Instead, in consideration of the immense quantity of processing, networking, and storage capability provided by a warehouse-scale computing environment, it is much more appropriate to think of the entire data center as a single, massively parallel computing system.

Early electronic computers were huge systems, occupying large rooms. Since then, computer architectures have evolved to arrive at today's fingernail-size processor chips possessing vastly more...