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May 23, 2017 at 12:38 history edited CommunityBot
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May 24, 2016 at 14:44 history edited Thomas Ayoub CC BY-SA 3.0
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May 24, 2016 at 12:29 comment added Peter Cordes "use of MMX rather than x87 was slower in one implementation". I'm not surprised, since MMX is integer-only. You'd have to use fixed-point math to do Monte-Carlo with MMX. Although perhaps you meant SSE?
May 24, 2016 at 12:22 comment added Peter Cordes So please don't call it "the i7 architecture", because that's nonsense. It makes little sense to lump SnB-family in with Nehalem but not Core 2 or earlier. When Nehalem was new, "Core i7" was sometimes used (even by Intel) as the name for the CPU family, but then Intel released SnB i7 CPUs... A lot of the basic stuff like partial-register stalls, partial flag stalls, and register read stalls work the same or very similarly in PPro and Nehalem, but differently in SnB-family. Just call it the SnB-family pipeline. Or the Haswell pipeline if you're talking about your lab computers.
May 24, 2016 at 12:15 comment added Peter Cordes It's generally agreed that the Intel P6-family of microarchitectures ended with Nehalem (the first i7). Intel Sandybridge is regarded as the first of a new family of microarchitectures (all of which are sold under the i7 brand name), due to substantial changes to the internals. e.g. physical register file instead of storing operands in the ROB. uop cache. 2 load ports. Substantial changes to the internal uop format (can no longer micro-fuse indexed addressing modes). The decoders are different, too: producing 4 fused-domain uops per clock max, instead of 4 instructions -> 7 uops max.
S May 24, 2016 at 11:19 history answered Peter Cordes CC BY-SA 3.0
S May 24, 2016 at 11:19 history made wiki Post Made Community Wiki by Peter Cordes