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{{acorn title|ARM1|arch}}
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{{armh title|ARM1|arch}}
 
{{microarchitecture
 
{{microarchitecture
 
|atype=CPU
 
|atype=CPU
 
|name=ARM1
 
|name=ARM1
|designer=Acorn Computers
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|designer=ARM Holdings
 
|manufacturer=VLSI Technology
 
|manufacturer=VLSI Technology
 
|introduction=1985
 
|introduction=1985
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|l1d per=Core
 
|l1d per=Core
 
|successor=ARM2
 
|successor=ARM2
|successor link=acorn/microarchitectures/arm2
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|successor link=arm holdings/microarchitectures/arm2
 +
|pipeline=<!-- yes for following options -->
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|OoOE=<!-- Yes or No only -->
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|inst=Yes
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|cache=Yes
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|succession=Yes
 
}}
 
}}
'''ARM1''' was the first [[ARM]] microarchitecture implemented by [[Acorn Computers]] as a research and development project for the BBC Computer Literacy Project. ARM1 was introduced in [[1985]] and was extended to be used as a [[coprocessor]] in the Acorn's [[BBC Micro]] microcomputers. ARM1 was distributed as an evaluation system and was never commercialized.
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'''ARM1''' was the first [[ARM]] microarchitecture implemented by [[ARM Holdings]] (then [[Acorn Computers]]) as a research and development project for the BBC Computer Literacy Project. ARM1 was introduced in [[1985]] and was extended to be used as a [[coprocessor]] in the Acorn's [[BBC Micro]] microcomputers. ARM1 was distributed as an evaluation system and was never commercialized.
  
 
== History ==
 
== History ==
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=== Block Diagram ===
 
=== Block Diagram ===
 
==== Core ====
 
==== Core ====
[[File:arm1 block diagram.svg|700px]]
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[[File:arm1 block diagram.svg]]
  
 
== Core ==
 
== Core ==
 
The ARM1 is an extremely simple 32-bit single-chip [[RISC]] microprocessor implementation with a number of [[CISC]] features.
 
The ARM1 is an extremely simple 32-bit single-chip [[RISC]] microprocessor implementation with a number of [[CISC]] features.
 
=== Pipeline ===
 
=== Pipeline ===
The ARM1 utilizes a [[pipelining]] technique in order to improve performance and efficiency. At peak performance the ARM1 can reach 8 [[million instructions per second]] with an average of 3 MIPS when using a 150 ns row access [[DRAM]]. The ARM1's pipeline consists of 3 stages (although some instructions may take as much as 5 cycles):  
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The ARM1 utilizes a [[pipelining]] technique in order to improve performance and efficiency. At peak performance the ARM1 can reach 8 [[million instructions per second]] with an average of 3 MIPS when using a 150 ns row access [[DRAM]]. The ARM1's pipeline consists of 3 states (although some instructions may take as much as 5 cycles):  
  
  
 
: [[File:arm1 pipeline.svg|800px]]
 
: [[File:arm1 pipeline.svg|800px]]
  
[[File:two-phase clock.svg|right|300px]]
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The ARM1 operates on a guaranteed non-overlapping [[two-phase clock]] which allowed for [[level-triggered]] transfer instead of [[edge-triggering]]. The two clock phases are not generated on-die but come from an external [[oscillator]]. A complete cycle on the ARM1 is therefore Φ1 + Φ2. To simplify system design, these clocks may be stretched to work in-sync with memory access times.
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The ARM1 operates on a guaranteed non-overlapping [[two-phase clock]] which allowed for [[level-triggered]] transfer instead of [[edge-triggering]]. The two clock phases are not generated on-die but come from an external [[oscillator]]. A complete cycle on the ARM1 is therefore Φ1 + Φ2.  
  
 
==== Fetch ====
 
==== Fetch ====
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The Register Decode handles the register selection for both read ports and the write port.
 
The Register Decode handles the register selection for both read ports and the write port.
 
The reason the decode is implemented in a number of separate units is because the ARM1 makes use of [[microcode]] [[ROM]]s ([[PLA]]). Each instruction is decoded into up to four [[µOP]] signal-wise. In other words, the [[ARM]] instructions are broken down into up to four sets of internal-µOP signals indicating things such as which registers to select or what value to shift by. For some complex operations such as [[block-transfer instructions|block-transfers]], the [[microsequencer]] also performs a looping operation for each register.
 
  
 
==== Execute ====
 
==== Execute ====
 
[[File:arm1 register file.svg|right|250px]]
 
[[File:arm1 register file.svg|right|250px]]
The ARM1 has a [[physical register file]] of 25 {{arch|32}} registers (same as the [[architectural register file]]). Register 15 ({{arm|R15}}) is the [[Program Counter]]. 16 of the registers are visible to the user with the remaining only being accessible while in supervisor mode. The register file has two read ports for the operands heading to the ALU and a single write port for the ALU write-back value. Additionally there is a dedicated {{arm|R15}} read and write port.
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The ARM1 has a [[physical register file]] of 25 {{arch|32}} registers (same as the [[architectural register file]]). Register 15 ({{arm|R15}}) is the [[Program Counter]]. 16 of the registers are visible to the user with the reminder only being accessible while in supervisor mode. The register file has two read ports for the operands heading to the ALU and a single write port for the ALU write-back value. Additionally there is a dedicated {{arm|R15}} read and write port.
  
 
Each cycle two values are operated on. During clock phase 1 (''Φ1'') the values are fetched from the appropriate sources into the ALU for execution and during clock phase 2 (''Φ2''), the 32-bit ALU output is stored onto the Register File write port.
 
Each cycle two values are operated on. During clock phase 1 (''Φ1'') the values are fetched from the appropriate sources into the ALU for execution and during clock phase 2 (''Φ2''), the 32-bit ALU output is stored onto the Register File write port.
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<div style="float: left; margin: 10px;">'''Register-Register:'''<br>[[File:arm1 reg reg.svg|300px]]</div>
 
<div style="float: left; margin: 10px;">'''Register-Register:'''<br>[[File:arm1 reg reg.svg|300px]]</div>
 
<div style="float: left; margin: 10px;">'''Register-Immediate:'''<br>[[File:arm1 reg imm.svg|300px]]</div></div>
 
<div style="float: left; margin: 10px;">'''Register-Immediate:'''<br>[[File:arm1 reg imm.svg|300px]]</div></div>
 
It's worth noting that the ARM1 lacked hardware multiplication which meant software had to resort to a software-based solution (e.g., classic [[Shift-and-Add Multiplication]]). For example to perform <code>var = x * 5;</code> one could rewrite it as <code>var = x + (x << 2);</code> to achieve the same result without a multiplication operation. The downside for this is that unless it's done for very simple operations (such as this example), software multiplication is horrifically slow.
 
  
 
{{clear}}
 
{{clear}}
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{{see also|Block-Transfer Instructions}}
 
{{see also|Block-Transfer Instructions}}
 
{{empty section}}
 
{{empty section}}
<!--
 
  Talk about the priority encoder ...
 
-->
 
  
 
== Die Shot ==
 
== Die Shot ==
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== All ARM1 Chips ==
 
== All ARM1 Chips ==
<!-- NOTE:
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{{empty section}}
          This table is generated automatically from the data in the actual articles.
 
          If a microprocessor is missing from the list, an appropriate article for it needs to be
 
          created and tagged accordingly.
 
 
 
          Missing a chip? please dump its name here: http://en.wikichip.org/wiki/WikiChip:wanted_chips
 
-->
 
{{comp table start}}
 
<table class="comptable sortable tc11 tc12 tc13">
 
<tr class="comptable-header"><th>&nbsp;</th><th colspan="12">List of ARM1-based Processors</th></tr>
 
{{comp table header 1|cols=Process, Launched, Frequency, Power Dissipation, Max Memory}}
 
{{#ask: [[Category:all microprocessor models]] [[instance of::microprocessor]] [[microarchitecture::ARM1]]
 
|?full page name
 
|?model number
 
|?microarchitecture
 
|?first launched
 
|?base frequency#MHz
 
|?power dissipation
 
|?max memory#MiB
 
|format=template
 
|template=proc table 3
 
|userparam=7
 
|mainlabel=-
 
|valuesep=,
 
}}
 
{{comp table count|ask=[[Category:all microprocessor models]] [[instance of::microprocessor]] [[microarchitecture::ARM1]]}}
 
</table>
 
{{comp table end}}
 
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==

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codenameARM1 +
core count1 +
designerAcorn Computers +
first launched1985 +
full page nameacorn/microarchitectures/arm1 +
instance ofmicroarchitecture +
instruction set architectureARMv1 +
manufacturerVLSI Technology +
microarchitecture typeCPU +
nameARM1 +
pipeline stages3 +
process3,000 nm (3 μm, 0.003 mm) +