The present invention relates to memory access methods for use in a unified memory system, especially, to the technology applicable to a computer system capable of performing arithmetic operations, creating video data, and presenting it on a display unit.
In conventional display and processing equipment using an unified memory, as set forth in Published Japanese Translations of PCT International Publications for Patent Application, Hei-510620 (1999), when the main storage and the image memory are integrated into a single memory, the CPU and the image memory are separated via a memory control feature called the “core logic”. A similar equipment configuration is also disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,790,138.
The prior art mentioned above is merely an integrated version of main storage and display areas. In this case, access from the instruction processing unit to the unified memory uses a system controller that constitutes the instruction processing unit and the chipset, and, for this reason, the latency increases. Since this is not allowed for in the prior art, the instruction processing time tends to increase. That is to say, the prior art has poses the inherent problem that the system performance deteriorates.
The main object of the present invention is to supply memory access methods in a unified memory system that are best suited for minimizing increases in latency in order to improve the above-mentioned situation, and for suppressing the deterioration of system performance in terms of unified memory configuration as well.
In order to solve the problem described above, in a multimedia data-processing system having at least one instruction processing unit, at least one display control unit, at least one input/output unit, and at least one unified memory comprising the areas accessed by said instruction processing unit and the areas accessed by said display control unit, an interface for connecting said unified memory and the LSI integrating at least said instruction processing unit and said display unit formed on a single silicon substrate is provided separately from an interface intended to connect said LSI and said input/output unit.
Also, said unified memory is included in said LSI. and an interface for access to the unified memory is formed within said LSI.
Embodiments of the present invention will be described below with reference to the drawings.
An embodiment of a memory access method based on the invention will be described with reference to the system shown in
The multimedia data input/output units consist of image display unit 2100, audio signal generator 2200, and video signal generator 2300. The data input/output and communications units consist of modem 3200, which establishes connection to communications lines, and drive 3100, which is able to access external storage media, such as a CD-ROM and DVD. The user instruction input units comprise keypad 4100, keyboard 4200, and mouse 4300.
Multimedia data-processing system 1000 comprises CPU 1100, unified memory 1200, auxiliary storage devices, such as flash memory 1300 and SRAM 1400, and input/output-use peripheral interface 1500 for connecting the user instruction input unit and modem 3200.
Also, CPU 1100 has input/output terminals for drive 3100 and multimedia data input/output units 2100, 2200, and 2300. These terminals are connected to display control unit 1140, audio control unit 1180, video input unit 1120, and high-speed data input/output unit 1160, each of which is located inside the CPU 1100. CPU 1100 has bus terminals for exchanging data with unified memory 1200, with the auxiliary storage devices, such as flash memory 1300 and SRAM 1400, and with the peripheral interface 1500. The auxiliary storage devices (1300 and 1400) and peripheral interface 1500 are connected to system bus control unit 1150 located inside the CPU 1100. CPU 1100 has an interface for connection to the drive 3100. These are connected to high-speed data input/output unit 1160 located inside the CPU 1100. CPU 1100 also has an interface for connection to the unified memory 1200. This unified memory is connected to unified memory control unit 1170 located inside the CPU 1100. In addition to these units, CPU 1100 contains instruction processing unit 1110 and pixel generation unit 1130.
Instruction processing unit 1110 has 64-bit bus terminals, to which video input unit 1120, pixel generation unit 1130, display control unit 1140, bus control unit 1150, high-speed data input/output unit 1160, unified memory control unit 1170, and audio control unit 1180 are connected via 64-bit internal bus 1192. Internal bus 1192 has its usage control arbitrated by unified memory control unit 1170.
For this purpose, system bus control unit 1150 and other portions are connected via control signal lines. Also, instruction processing unit 1110 is connected to system bus control unit 1150 via another internal bus 1191, and it can be connected to devices 1300, 1400, and 1500, all of which are present on the system bus 1920.
Unified memory control unit 1170 is connected to unified memory 1200 via unified memory port 1910, unified memory 1200 has memory areas shared by the internal components of CPU 1100. These memory areas comprise main storage area 1210, which is mainly used by instruction processing unit 1110, display area 1220, which is mainly used by display control unit 1140, video area 1230, which is mainly used by video input unit 1120, and graphic pattern drawing area 1240, which is mainly used by pixel generation unit 1130. Since these areas are arranged in a single address space, they can be freely variable in terms of both position and size. Although the present embodiment assumes a 64-bit pattern, the contents of the present invention do not limit the bus width.
Only the basic section of the multimedia data-processing system 1000 shown in
It is possible to include the unified memory in the LSI on which the CPU 1100 is formed, and to form the unified memory port 1910 inside the LSI.
Under the present embodiment, with both the instruction processing unit 1110 and the display control unit 1140 inside CPU 1100, main storage area 1210 and display area 1220 are provided within the single unified memory 1200 to reduce the number of memory components and thus to contribute to size reduction of the system. In this case, since unified memory port 1910 is provided independently of the system bus 1920 in order to avoid the likely deterioration of performance due to concentrated access to the unified memory 1200, access to the unified memory 1200 is enhanced in terms of speed, and, thus, the problem of performance deterioration can be solved.
Examples of equipment configurations based on the present invention and the prior art will be described below for comparative purposes with reference to
An example of an equipment configuration based on the prior art is shown in
In general, flash memory 1300, which contains a boot program intended to initialize instruction processing unit 1110a during system startup, is connected to system bus 1920. In actual applications, an auxiliary storage device for exclusive use by instruction processing unit 1110a is also connected to the system bus 1920. In such a configuration, since the system bus 1920 has a number of system components connected thereto, the electrical load is significantly increased and the bus cannot be driven fast. Although the operating frequency at this time depends on the quality of the board design, about 33 MHz would be the maximum achievable operating frequency.
System controller 1500a also has a local bus for connecting various peripheral units and an interface for access to unified memory 1200. Unified memory 1200 is shared with display control unit 1140. In this example, the interface to unified memory 1200 is electrically connected. The electrical load on the system bus 1500a, therefore, increases significantly, and this also becomes an obstruction to the improvement of the operating frequency. In this example, where only three system components are connected, about 50 MHz would be the maximum achievable operating frequency.
Also, since the bus is connected at the same potential, the bus is most likely to be driven by system controller 1500a, display control unit 1140, and unified memory 1200, and, for this reason, arbitration among the three components is required. In addition, since system controller 1500a and display control unit 1140, in particular, operate actively with respect to unified memory 1200, several cycles are obviously required for the mere purpose of arbitration on bus access, and this increases the overhead. In short, access from instruction processing unit 1110a to unified memory 1200 requires two chipset crossovers, arbitration overhead, and even an operation time at about 33 MHz.
An example of an equipment configuration based on the present invention is shown in
In accordance with the present invention, as described above, signal transmission from instruction processing unit 1110 to unified memory 1200 is not via system controller 1500b. The Electrical load, therefore, decreases. The fact that simple board wiring is employed also reduces the load. Accordingly, the operating frequency can be improved and fast driving at 100 MHz, for example, is possible. Only one chipset crossover is required for access from either instruction processing unit 1110a or display control unit 1140, and fast driving is possible. System bus 1920, which is expected not to operate fast because of its significant load, is provided independently of the unified memory port 1910 and operates at low speed.
Next, faster access to unified memory 1200 will be described with reference to
In
The frequencies mentioned above can be freely combined and the present invention does not limit the respective values. Two cases different in frequency settings, however, are described below. Both cases have the characteristic that “fm” is greater than “fs”. Access to unified memory 1200, based on the present invention, can be made faster than in the conventional configuration with connected main storage unit 1210 on system bus 1920.
An example of frequency setting based on “fs” is shown in
In frequency example 1, “fs” is 42 MHz, “fm” is twice as large (84 MHz), and “fc” is four times as large (168 MHz). Internal bus 1191 operates at “fm”, and “fs-fm” conversion occurs in system bus control unit 1150 and “fm-fc” conversion occurs in instruction processing unit 1110. Since “fm” is twice as large as “fs”, unified memory 1200 is accessible at high speed. Also, since “fc” is twice as large as “fm”, synchronization between the frequency “fm” of internal bus 1192 and “fc” is easy, and this is another factor which contributes to faster accessing. In addition, since “fc” is twice as large as “fm”, the upper limit value of “fm” is determined by that of “fc”. Furthermore, “fd” is also limited, and, in this example, it is limited to 15 MHz. This frequency is sufficient to produce a display of about 400 pixels (horizontal) and 240 pixels (vertical), and the configuration in this case satisfies requirements relating to screen size and CPU performance.
In frequency example 2, “fs” is 50 MHz, “fm” is twice as large (100 MHz), and “fc” is three times as large (150 MHz). Although internal bus 1191 operates at “fm” in frequency example 1, this bus operates at “fs” in frequency example 2. Also, although the operating frequency of internal bus 1191 remains fixed at “fm”, the interface to instruction processing unit 1110 operates at “fs” so as to avoid complex circuit composition due to the fact that, when “fm-fc” conversion occurs in instruction processing unit 1110, the conversion is a 2-versus-3 conversion. In this case, access from instruction processing unit 1110 to unified memory 1200 is via the interface of “fs” in frequency. Therefore, although the access performance decreases, the upper limit value of “fm” can be increased to ⅔ of “fc”. This, in turn, makes it possible to increase the display frequency “fd” as well, and, in this example, to 40 MHz, which is equivalent to a screen size of about 800 pixels and 480 pixels. That is to say, in this configuration, the screen size takes priority over CPU performance.
The timing of write-access from instruction processing unit 1110 to unified memory 1200 is shown in
Instruction processing unit 1110 has a burst data transfer function. In this embodiment, four write operations (W0 to W3) are performed in one bus cycle. Thus, data can be transferred at high speed. Since unified memory control unit 1170 needs to receive from instruction processing unit 1110 the data written into the SDRAM (namely, D0 to D3), transfer permission signal RDY# is asserted in the timing that commands W0 to W3 are issued.
The timing of read-access from instruction processing unit 1110 to unified memory 1200 is shown in
Instruction processing unit 1110 issues read commands R0 to R3. Since read operations require a fixed access time, the arrivals of data D0 to D3 are delayed by several cycles. Instruction processing unit 1110 has a burst data transfer function based on such arrival timing of data. In this embodiment, four read operations (R0 to R3) are performed in one bus cycle. Thus, data can be transferred at high speed. Since unified memory control unit 1170 needs to receive from instruction processing unit 1110 the data to the SDRAM (namely, D0 to D3), transfer permission signal RDY# is asserted in the timing that commands W0 to W3 are issued. Burst transfer is possible for reading as well.
The fact that the burst transfer shown in
In conventional embodiments, the standard interface of system bus 1920 must always be used to make access from instruction processing unit 1110 to unified memory 1200. The standard interface enables data to be transferred only one time in one bus cycle. When the performance of the instruction processing unit 1110 is considered, a line transfer time associated with the possible mis-operation of the cache memory built into instruction processing unit 1110 is important in terms of performance. Line transfer via the standard interface, however, is executed in a plurality of split bus cycles (D0, D1, D2, D3). This state is shown in “Instruction processing (1)” of
During burst transfer based on the present invention, such latency as mentioned above occurs only once, with the result that, as shown in “Instruction processing (2)” and “Unified memory (2)” of
Display access restrictions, which are other embodiment conditions based on the unified memory configuration, will be described with reference to
An example of display screen composition is shown in
An example in which unified memory 1200 is accessed with a display access time being taken into consideration is shown in
Conversely, a larger screen display can be produced in the batch access mode. In this mode, data for creating screen display 40 is accessed in access units 41, 42, and 43 at the same time. In this case, the total time required for the access in access units 41, 42, and 43 is reduced, and a screen display larger in “fd” can be produced. This access sequence is accomplished by specifying the batch access instruction mode, and batch access notification information is sent from display control unit 1140 to unified memory control unit 1170. When the information is received, unified memory control unit 1170 provides control so that only display access operations will be performed.
An example of using split access or batch access, depending on the specified display access mode, is shown in
More specific examples of mode selection for access to unified memory 1200 are shown in
(1) AM is short for Arbitration Mode bit. This bit specifies the method of assigning priority levels for bus arbitration. New settings by AM bit updating are made valid for the next vertical flyback time period onward.
When AM=‘0’:
The system bus control unit (SGBC) 1150, pixel generation unit (RU) 1130, and CPU interface (CIU) 1155 shown in
When AM=‘1’:
An independent priority level can be assigned to each SGBC, RU, and CIU. However, the same priority level cannot be assigned to two or more units.
(2) PC is short for Priority Change mode bit. The priority levels that have been specified in registers are set as the priority levels for bus arbitration. The PC mode bit is valid only when AM is set to ‘1’.
When PC=‘0’:
The priority levels that have been specified in registers (SPR, RPR, PP1R, PP2R) are not set as the priority levels for bus arbitration. (Default)
When PC=‘1’:
The priority levels that have been specified in registers are set as the priority levels for bus arbitration. The priority levels for bus arbitration, however, are updated, only when all the above registers are correctly set. When data settings are correct, the above register data is incorporated during internal updating, and then the PC bit is cleared automatically. Even when data settings are wrong, the PC bit is also cleared automatically during the next vertical flyback time period.
(3) DPM, short for Display unit Preference Mode bit, specifies a bus arbitration priority level to the display unit. New settings by DPM bit updating are made valid during the next vertical flyback time period.
When DPM=‘0’:
The same priority level is assigned to the display unit and the video input unit. (Default)
When DPM=‘1’:
The display unit takes a higher priority level than that of the video input unit. The screen display size can be increased, compared with the case of ‘0’. If the setting of the DPM bit is ‘1’, normal operation of the video input unit is guaranteed, only when it satisfies limitations.
(4) EC, short for Endian Change mode bit, specifies whether the endian change function is to be performed on units such as the pixel generation unit and display unit.
When EC=‘0’:
No endian changes are not performed between the display unit, the pixel generation unit, and the unified memory control unit.
When EC=‘1’:
Endian changes are performed between the display unit, the pixel generation unit, and the unified memory control unit.
(5) DAM, short for Display Access Mode bit, specifies whether multiple-screen display access is to be split or to made in batch form. This scheme is an embodiment of access based on the data settings of
When DAM=‘0’:
Multiple-screen display access is split. (Default)
When DAM=‘1’:
Multiple-screen display access is made in batch form.
The PRR register specifying priority according to the particular setting of the PC of the UMMR register in
MP priority to the MCU (unified memory control unit 1170), CP priority to the CIU (CPU interface 1155), SP priority to SGBC (system bus control unit 1150), and RP priority to the RU (pixel generation unit 1130). The priority level for bus arbitration is to be specified in two bits for each unit. It is prohibited to assign the same value to multiple units.
A detailed block diagram of the CPU 1100, which is inside the multimedia data-processing system of
Selector 1151 operates according to the mode, and depending on this, the system bus 1920 is connected to the internal bus 1191 via the pixel port 1152 of the system bus control unit (SGBC) 1150 or is connected directly to the internal bus. The former case applies to frequency example 1 shown in
Endian changes are conducted by the endian changer 1171 within unified memory control unit (MCU) 1170. These changes are conducted for the purpose of arbitration between the display control unit (DU) 1140 and pixel generation unit (RBU) 1130 that operate under the little-endian scheme, and the unified memory 1200 within which data will be arranged under the same endian scheme as that of instruction processing unit 1110. If the endian of instruction processing unit 1110 is “little”, it is specified that no changes will be conducted, and if the endian is “big”, it is specified that changes be specified.
CPU 1100 has a pixel port 1152, which functions as a transfer mediator between external devices (1300, 1400, 1500) and the unified memory 1200, and a DMA module 1156 for CPU interface CIU 1155. These components have setup bits in the respective modules so as to ensure matching between unified memory 1200 and the endian of the data itself within the external devices.
Also, since the data converter (YUV) 1157 of the CPU interface CIU 1155 operates in the little-endian mode, endian changer 1172 is required at the entrance as well. Of course, such a configuration may be modifiable by entering the proper data.
A memory map of the various resources when viewed from instruction processing unit 1110 is shown in
In
CPU 1100 has an endian changer 1171 in the unified memory control unit (MCU) 1170, and such structure is realized by specifying whether conversion is to occur in space. The SGCS space is a register space for system control.
Next, details of the interface will be described below.
As shown in
The interface described with reference
A further detailed description of
The above will be described in further detail below. The “px_mu_vu_actype” and “px_mu_du_actype” signals denote the types of access. If the signal level is ‘0’, unified memory 1200 is accessed using addresses different by one cycle. This access scheme is referred to as the random mode, which is suitable for writing into any address as in pixel generation unit 1120. If the signal level is ‘1’, sequential data access beginning with the starting address takes place. This is referred to as the sequential mode, which is suitable for such purposes as reading out display data. Since these two types of access modes are provided, the quantity of address creation logic in the entire system can be minimized. Signals “px_vu_mu_stadr” and “px_du_mu_stadr” denote the starting addresses of access to unified memory 1200. Prior to actual transfer, the ACT commands of unified memory control unit 1170 can be started by communicating the above-mentioned starting addresses to unified memory control unit 1170. Signals “px_vu_mu_tsize” and “px_du_mu_tsize” denote access counts. These signals are required for the support of the burst transfer described earlier in this SPECIFICATION, and the burst length can be freely changed.
In this way, requests and confirmations are performed, and then the write (w) or read (r) phase begins.
The write operation is shown in
The read operation is shown in
The interface described with reference to
Write-access is shown in
Read-access is shown in
The status where a wait time (latency) occurs in write-access is shown in
The waveform developed when the next write request signal arrives with the wait signal on is shown in
A waveform showing the burst write operation is shown in
As described above, according to the present invention, latency can be reduced since access from the instruction processing unit to the unified memory is directly made via an interface that can be driven at high speed, instead of the system controller constituting the instruction processing unit and the chipset. Thus, even in an unified memory configuration, it is possible to suppress the extension of an instruction processing time and to minimize the deterioration of system performance.
It is also possible to make efficient access from the instruction processing unit by increasing its operating frequency to an integer multiple of the frequency of the unified memory port. Likewise, the operating frequency of the instruction processing unit can be increased to an integer multiple of the frequency of the system bus, and, in addition, data that matches the particular characteristics of the system can be easily set by making those ratios selectable.
Furthermore, since a plurality of sets of data can be transferred in one bus cycle in the burst access mode, bus efficiency can be improved and a series of access latencies can be reduced.
Besides, it is possible to optimize latency by assigning the appropriate priority for access to the unified memory, to improve burst data transfer efficiency by processing together the transfer of data via the system bus and the transfer of data via the instruction processing unit, and to minimize the repetition of processing by providing an endian change function in order to minimize the repetition of the data transfer itself.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2000-254986 | Aug 2000 | JP | national |
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/791,817, filed Feb. 26, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,839,063 which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050062749 A1 | Mar 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09791817 | Feb 2001 | US |
Child | 10983757 | US |