|
Article on other languages:
|
The Intel 486, otherwise known as the 80486, i486 or just 486, was the first tightly pipelined x86 design. Introduced in 1989, it was the first x86 chip that used more than a million transistors, due to a large on-chip cache and an integrated floating point unit. It represents a second generation of 32-bit x86 designs, following the original 32-bit x86 processor, the Intel 80386, and a fourth generation of binary compatible CPUs since the 8086. (The i486 was so named, without the usual 80-prefix, because of a court ruling that prohibited trademarking numbers like 80486. Later, with the Pentium, Intel dropped number-based naming altogether.)
ImprovementsThe instruction set of the i486 is very similar to its predecessor, the Intel 80386, with the addition of only a few extra instructions, such as CMPXCHG which executes the Compare-and-swap atomic operation and the XADD which executes the Fetch-and-add atomic operation. Though many atomic instructions have existed since the 8086/8088, they did not correspond to the atomic instructions implemented in certain RISC processors, which made it harder to port some applications from these processors. From a performance point of view, the architecture of the i486 is a vast improvement over the 80386. It has an on-chip unified instruction and data cache, an on-chip floating-point unit (FPU), and an enhanced bus interface unit. In addition, simple instructions (such as ALU reg,reg) has a single clock throughput. These improvements yield a rough doubling in performance over the 386 at the same clock rate. A 386 (or 286) chip therefore has to reach 50 MHz to be comparable with low end parts in the 486 series. Differences between the 386 and 486
The 486 has a 32-bit data bus and a 32-bit address bus. This required either four matched 30-pin (8-bit) SIMMs or one 72-pin (32-bit) SIMM on a typical PC motherboard. The 32-bit address bus means that 4 GiB of memory can be directly addressed. The Intel project manager for the 80486 was Pat Gelsinger. In May 2006 Intel announced that production of the 80486 would cease at the end of September 2007. [1] Although the chip had long been obsolete for personal computer applications, Intel had continued production for use in embedded systems. The 80486 was able to compute at up to 41 million instructions per second. [2] ModelsThere are several suffixes and variants including:
WT = Write-Through cache strategy, WB = Write-Back cache strategy The specified maximum internal clock frequency (on Intels versions) ranged from 16 to 100 MHz. The 16MHz i486SX model was used by Dell Computers but sometimes ridiculed for the fact that it was handily beaten by many 386 systems. One of the few 486 models specified for a 50 MHz bus (486DX-50) initially had overheating problems and was moved to the 0.8 micron fabrication process. However, problems continued when installed in local bus systems due to the high bus speed, making it rather unpopular with mainstream consumers as local bus video was considered a requirement at the time. It was soon eclipsed by the clock-doubled i486DX2 which instead ran the CPU logic at twice the external bus speed. However, the 486DX-50 remained popular with users of EISA systems. More powerful 486 iterations such as the OverDrive and DX4 were less popular (the latter available as an OEM part only), as they came out after Intel had released the next generation Pentium. Certain steppings of the DX4 also officially supported 50MHz bus operation but was a seldom used feature. GamingThe 486DX2 66 MHz was the most widespread high-end 486 version. For many players of video games during the early and mid 1990s, towards the end of the MS-DOS gaming era, it was often coupled with 8 - 16 MB RAM and a VLB video card. This configuration was capable of running every title available for several years after its release, making it a "sweet spot" in CPU performance and longevity. The introduction of 3D graphics spelled the end of the 486's reign, because of its heavy use of floating point calculations and the need for faster cache and more memory bandwidth. Developers also began to target the Pentium almost exclusively with assembly optimizations (e.g. Quake). Competitive alternatives486 compatible processors have been produced by other companies such as IBM, Texas Instruments, AMD, Cyrix, UMC, and SGS Thompson. Some are near duplicates in terms of specifications and performance, some are not. The 486 was, however, covered by many of Intel's 386 patents as well as some of its own. Intel and IBM have broad cross-licenses of these patents, and AMD was granted rights to the relevant patents in the 1995 settlement of a lawsuit between the companies.[3] AMD produced several models of the 486 using the 40MHz bus (486DX-40, 486DX/2-80 & 486DX/4-120) not available from Intel, as well a 90MHz part using a proprietary 30MHz for OEM use only. The fastest running 486 CPU, the Am5x86,ran at 133MHz was released by AMD in 1995. 150MHz and 160MHz parts were planned but never officially released. Motherboards and BusesEarly 486 machines were equipped with several ISA (Industry Standard Architecture) aka "AT-Bus" slots and sometimes one or two 8-bit-only "PC/XT-Bus" slots. Many motherboards enabled overclocking of these up from the default 6 or 8 MHz to perhaps 16.5 or 20 MHz (half the i486 bus clock) in a number of steps, often from within the BIOS setup. Especially older peripheral cards normally worked well at such speeds as they often used standard MSI chips instead of slower (at the time) custom VLSI designs. This could give significant performance gains (such as for old video cards moved from a 386 or 286 computer, for example). However, operation beyond 8 or 10MHz could lead to stability problems, particularly in systems equipped with SCSI and/or sound cards. Some motherboards came equipped with a 32-bit version of the ISA-standard called EISA (Extended Industry Standard Architecture), and offered a number of attractive features such as increased bandwidth, extended addressing and IRQ sharing. However, EISA cards were very expensive and later relegated to the server and workstation arena, being rather quickly supplanted by the simpler but faster (and often buggy) VLB (VESA Local Bus) on consumer desktops. PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect) then began gradually replacing VLB during the final one or two years of the 486's sale life. Mature 486 boards were normally equipped with both PCI- and ISA-slots, and sometimes a single VLB-slot as well. In this configuration VLB or PCI though-put sometimes suffered greatly depending on how the buses were bridged. In this setup the VL-Bus slot was usually only compatible with video cards (VLB-IDE, multi I/O, or SCSI cards often had problems on motherboards with PCI slots). The VL-Bus operated at the same clock speed as the i486-bus (basically being a local 486-bus). The PCI bus also usually depended on the i486 clock but sometimes had a divider setting available via the BIOS. This could be set to 1/1 or 1/2, sometimes even 2/3 (for 50MHz CPU clocks). Some boards limited the PCI clock to the specified maximum of 33 MHz (certain network cards assumed 33MHz and would produce erroneous bit-rates in an overclocked slot). The ISA clock was either generated by a separate clock generator or by a divider of the VLB/PCI clock. One of the earliest complete systems to use the 80486 chip was the Apricot VX FT, produced by United Kingdom hardware manufacturer Apricot Computers. Even overseas in the United States it drew attention as "The World's First 486" in a popular September 1989 issue of Byte magazine (shown right). Later 486 boards also supported Plug-And-Play, the Microsoft technology that began as a part of Windows 95 designed to make component installation easier for consumers. ObsolescenseWindows 95 signaled the end of the 486 era due to its high memory requirements (16MB to perform as well as Windows 3.x with just 8MB). Many 486 users at that time were running eight 1MB 30-pin SIMMs leaving no available slots for expansion. As 4meg 30-pin SIMMs were still very expensive at that time, it made more sense to buy a Pentium rather than spend a premium on upgrading a system that was nearing the end of its service life. The 486 were used as budget machine for people who could not afford the latest computers until around 2001 when Windows 95 was not supported and Windows 98, ME, NT 4.0, 2000, NT 4.0 and XP required more powerful computers. ReferencesSee also
NotesThis article was originally based on material from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, which is licensed under the GFDL. External links
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
Mercedes Car
This site monitored by SitePinger.net