Edit Values | |
Cortex-A9 µarch | |
General Info | |
Arch Type | CPU |
Designer | ARM Holdings |
Manufacturer | TSMC |
Introduction | October 3, 2007 |
Process | 40 nm |
Instructions | |
ISA | ARMv7 |
Succession | |
Cortex-A9 (codename Falcon) is the successor to the Cortex-A8, a low-power performance ARM microarchitecture designed by ARM Holdings for the mobile market. This microarchitecture is designed as a synthesizable IP core and is sold to other semiconductor companies to be implemented in their own chips.
The Cortex-A9 was later succeeded by four independent lines - high-performance (A15), mainstream performance (A12), high efficiency (A7), and ultra-low power (A5).
Compiler support[edit]
Compiler | Arch-Specific | Arch-Favorable |
---|---|---|
Arm Compiler | -mcpu=cortex-a9 |
-mtune=cortex-a9
|
GCC | -mcpu=cortex-a9 |
-mtune=cortex-a9
|
LLVM | -mcpu=cortex-a9 |
-mtune=cortex-a9
|
One can specify NEON support using the -mfpu=neon
option. Note that GCC will not generate floating-point operations for auto-vectorization constructs because NEON, under ARMv7, is not fully IEEE 754-compliant. It's possible to use -funsafe-math-optimizations
to circumvent that behavior.
Architecture[edit]
Key changes from Cortex-A8[edit]
- Fully synthesizable RTL (prior designs were hand/automated layout)
- 40 nm process (from 65 nm)
- New out-of-order pipeline (from in-order)
- Shorter pipeline (9-12 stages, down from 13)
- 2x frequency (2 GHz, up from 1 GHz)
- NEON
- Added Half precision support
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Licensees[edit]
Arm named the following companies as licensees.
codename | Cortex-A9 + |
designer | ARM Holdings + |
first launched | October 3, 2007 + |
full page name | arm holdings/microarchitectures/cortex-a9 + |
instance of | microarchitecture + |
instruction set architecture | ARMv7 + |
manufacturer | TSMC + |
microarchitecture type | CPU + |
name | Cortex-A9 + |
process | 40 nm (0.04 μm, 4.0e-5 mm) + |