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FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to high speed computer processors, in particular, to computer processors having cache data and instruction stores.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Choosing the parameters of a cache fill strategy that will deliver good performance requires knowledge of cache access patterns.
Long cache fills have the advantage that actual bus bandwidth rises towards the theoretical peak as read size increases. But once the read size exceeds the bus width satisfying the read requires multiple bus cycles and thus may increase cache miss tendency.
If the code is making long sequential sweeps through one or more data structures that are contiguous in memory (e.g., the sort of code that benefits most directly from a "vectorizing" compiler and vector hardware) then typically a long cache fill will be desirable. The extremely high locality of the stream of data references means that there is a commensurately high probability that the additional data read during a long cache fill will actually be used. Finally, because the performance of such "vector" applications is frequently a direct function of memory bandwidth the improved bus utilization translates into increased application speed.
When there is more randomness in the stream of data references a long cache fill may actually degrade performance. There are at least two reasons for this. Because of the lower probability that the additional data will ever be used the larger number of bus cycles necessary to complete a long cache fill may actually lead to an increased average memory load latency. The larger fill size also decreases the number of replaceable cache lines and may therefore hurt performance by increased thrashing in the use of those lines. In other words, it increases the probability that the process of servicing one cache miss will expunge from the cache the contents of some other line that would have taken a hit in the near future. When such behavior becomes especially severe it is termed "thrashing in the cache".
Thus, a conflict exists in providing a system which services the rather predictable needs of well behaved "vector" applications and the chaotic needs of more general computations.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to the present invention, two distinct cache fill sequences of 16 bytes and 64 bytes are provided and chosen according to the size and address alignment of the data requested by the associated processor. No data is transferred from main memory if there is a cache hit. If there is a cache miss, and either a quadword is not requested or a quadword not aligned to a multiple of 64 bytes is requested, a shorter block of 16 bytes is transferred from main memory. If there is a cache miss and a quadword is requested, a longer block of 64 bytes is transferred to the cache from main memory, in this context, a quadword is 8 bytes.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
These and other features of the present invention will be better understood by reading the following detailed description, taken together with the Drawings, wherein:
FIG. 1 is a flow chart showing the operation of one embodiment of the present invention; and
FIG. 2 is a block diagram of one embodiment of the present invention operable according to the flow chart of FIG. 1.
To keep the mechanics of cache management simple, cache lines must adhere to the same natural (or other) word alignment strategy as all other aspects of the architecture as defined in co-pending, commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/255,105 entitled METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR CONCURRENT DISPATCH OF INSTRUCTIONS TO MULTIPLE FUNCTIONAL UNITS, filed Oct. 7, 1988, incorporated by reference.
In recognition of the fact that opcode space is a precious commodity and of the desirability of making the presence of a variable length cache fill mechanism totally transparent to a compiler or an assembly language programmer, the method and apparatus according to the present invention, when a cache miss occurs chooses an appropriate fill size.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION


According to the operation of one embodiment 100 of FIG. 2 illustrated in the flow chart 50 of FIG. 1, when the processor 102 requests a data read or write 52 into cache 104, the vector reference detection logic 106 responds to the type 107 (e. g., read, write, no-op) and data size 108 signals which indicates (54) if a 4 or 8 byte transaction is requested by the processor 102.
If the data is in the cache 104 as indicated by a cache hit (56, 58) provided by a positive tag comparison 110, the transaction between the processor 102 and cache 104 proceeds (60, 62) without data transfer from the main memory 120.
Referring to FIG. 1, if the tag of the processor 102 requested data was not found (56, 58) by the tag compare logic, and if the size of the processor requested data is 4 bytes, then a block of 16 bytes is loaded 66 into the cache from main memory 120.
As can be seen in FIG. 1, if the processor requested data is not in the cache 104 as indicated by the tag compare logic 110, the vector reference logic determines (64) if the requested data address 112 is 64 byte aligned (aligned to an integer multiple of 64 bytes,) if so, then 64 bytes of data is transferred (68) from main memory 120 to the cache 104. If the processor requested data is not in the cache and if the requested data address is not a memory address aligned (i.e. corresponding) to an integer multiple of 64 bytes, then only a 16-byte data block is loaded from memory into cache. Registers 111, 113, 115 and 117 provide temporary storage of the command, address and data signals.
Two properties of the above-described system architecture and process according to the present invention are particularly significant for several reasons. First the architecture may be viewed as incorporating "an address formation and sequencing unit, and an executed unit". This structure and the availability of both integer and floating point operations in the execute unit means that there is an obvious strategy for decomposing vector primitives. This strategy will work independent of the type of data being processed. Second the present architecture provides selective 8 byte transfers to and from an even/odd pair of floating point registers. Since, as mentioned above, vector loops tend to be limited by the rate at which operands can be made available from and results returned to memory using these 8 byte loads and stores to move two 4 byte data (2 single precision floating point values or 2 long word integers) in a single cycle makes an enormous difference in the performance of loops operating on vectors of 4 byte objects. Thus on the system architecture according to the present invention, there is a very high probability that any "vector-like" loop will be implemented in terms of 8-byte loads and stores.
Finally, since it is typically only vector loops that would benefit from long cache fill sequences and since the vast majority of all such loops process memory in ascending order we wanted to recognize the possibility for a long fill only when a cache miss occurred on an address corresponding to the beginning of a long cache line. This avoids excessive false triggering of the long fill in more general code while still permitting it under exactly those conditions when it will do the most good.
Thus the present invention of providing a long fill for a cache miss that occurs while performing an 8 byte load from a long line (64 byte) boundary provides significant improvement over a single length cache fill.
The scope of the present invention further includes an implementation which would support vector access to descending locations. This would be done by enabling a long fill during a cache miss on an 8 byte load from the first 8 bytes or the 8 bytes of a 64 byte line.
Details of related bus structure and methods are provided in co-pending, commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/263,711 entitled A QUASI-FAIR ARBITRATION SCHEME WITH DEFAULT OWNER SPEEDUP, filed Oct. 25, 1988 and incorporated by reference; details of related tag structure and methods are provided in APOLL-ll5XX, entitled DUPLICATE TAG STORE PURGE QUEUE, filed concurrently herewith and also incorporated by reference. Moreover, modifications and substitution of the above disclosed invention are within the scope of the present invention, which is not limited except by the claims which follow.
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