CSE381 – Computer
Architecture - Spring 2009
Syracuse
University L.C. Smith College Engineering and Computer Science
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Description
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CSE 381 Computer Architecture 3 Y: Data representation,
memory hierarchies, protection, specialized processors, multiple computers,
performance evaluation, and reliability. |
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Instructor
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Dr. Ehat Ercanli, CST 4-297, eercanli@syr.edu, 443-3564. Office hours: T TH 11:30am - 1:30pm. |
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TA
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B.S. Deepak, CST 1-131, bsdeepak@syr.edu, Office Hours: T TH 2:00-3:30pm. |
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Times
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8:00-9:20a.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays at Bowne Hall 110. |
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Prereqs.
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CSE 281, MAT 275 and 398. |
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Textbook
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Computer
Organization and Design by DA Patterson, JL Hennessy, 4th Edition,
2009, MKP. |
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Grading
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Homework
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Homework assignments are to be submitted in lecture on the assigned
due date. No late assignments will be accepted. You are expected to complete
the homework individually. However, you can discuss assignments and solutions
with each other, but all work submitted must be the sole work of the author.
Course projects will be completed individually or in-groups of two. Answers
to selected problems will be available on the class web page. |
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Exams
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All exams must be taken at the scheduled time unless a previous
arrangement (with a good reason) has been made with the instructor. |
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WWW
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Our class web page will be updated frequently with lecture
slides (when possible), homework assignments and solutions, and tests and
solutions, and more interesting stuff. |
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Attendance
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You are expected to attend each class punctually and remain for
the entire class period; tardiness disturbs everyone. You need to inform the
instructor in advance if you expect to miss a class or leave the course
before the end of the semester. If you miss class your absence will be
excused by the instructor only if a doctor's certificate or other evidence is
submitted. If you have been absent and fail to submit an excuse to the
instructor, your absence will be considered unexcused. Even if your absence is
excused, you remain responsible for the work associated with the class you
missed. There will be a number of
unannounced pop quizzes. |
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Academic
Honesty
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Cheating in any form is not tolerated, nor is assisting another
person to cheat. The submission of any work by a student is taken as a
guarantee that the thoughts and expressions in it are the student's own
except when properly credited to another. Violations of this principle include giving or receiving aid in
an exam or where otherwise prohibited, fraud, plagiarism, the falsification
or forgery of any record, and any other deceptive act in connection with
academic work. Plagiarism is the representation of another's words, ideas,
programs, formulae, options, or other products of work as one's own, either
overtly or by failing to attribute them to their true source. Always protect your own work from others, since it is often not
possible to determine who the originator or the copier was. Such offense will
result in a failing grade ‘F’ and a letter of reprimand in your
permanent student file. |
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Required
Knowledge and Skills |
Recall: § You should be able to explain operations pertained to
a basic electrical circuit, gate technologies, and memory systems. § You should be able to explain Boolean algebra and the
design methods such as Combinational logic design and Sequential machine
design. § You
should be able to enumerate the basic components of a computer. § You
should be able to enumerate the steps required to execute a program. Comprehension: § When given an integer number in decimal, binary or
hexadecimal representation, you should be able to translate it to any other
base including two’s complement. § You should be able to translate between various
formal representations for design and analysis, (e.g., translate state tables
into a schematic of registers and logic, translate logic schematics into
logic functions, etc.) and interpret the meaning of the various formal
representations. § When given an abstract description or model of a
component or system, you should be able to translate the description into an
alternative abstract description or model. § You should be able to recognize the basic components
of a computing system as ALU, Memory, and Input/Output
Systems and explain their operations. § When given a computer
architecture, you should be able to explain the Instruction Execution Cycle. § You should be able to describe a microprocessor
architecture, memory management and input-output system, the assembly,
linking and running processes. Application: § When given English language descriptions of behavior,
you should be able to translate them into the appropriate specification such
as a Boolean equation or a state transition diagram. § When given a formal model specifying the behavior of
a component or system such as a finite-state machine specification, you
should be able to refine it into an implementation consisting of registers
and combinational logic (encoders, decoders, multiplexers, adders, ALUs, and
counters). § When given a flowchart, you should be able to write a
program in assembly language that includes conditional processing, and
integer and logic arithmetic. |
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Acquired
Knowledge and Skills |
Recall: § You should be able to explain layered computer
architectures and digital logic layer defining the technology. § You should be able to define the differences between
various classes of systems such as CISC & RISC, micro programmable &
wired decoding, SIMD & MIMD systems, and distributed computing &
parallel processing. § You should be able to explain bus structures existing
in computer architectures and the layered memory system including cache and
main memory. Comprehension: § You should be able to translate between various
formal representations for design and analysis, (e.g., translate instruction
set architecture to data path and control path) and interpret the meaning of
the various formal representations. § You should be able to recognize the pipelining
hazards and means to avoid them. Application: § When given a formal model specifying the behavior of
a component or system such as a data path specification, you should be able
to refine it into an implementation consisting of registers and combinational
logic. § You should be able to modify a system to enhance its
overall throughput using various techniques such as pipelining, dual-ported
memory, and multiple execution units. Analysis: § When given an abstract description of a component or
system and an implementation, you should be able to determine if the
implementation is faithful to the abstract description. § When presented an enhancement in a system, you should
be able to analyze its effect on the overall performance and cost. Synthesis: § When given an abstract description of computing
system, you should be able to create a concrete implementation (such as data
path and its controller) that is a faithful refinement of the specification. Evaluation: § You should be able to judge the degree of correspondence
between abstract behavioral specifications and the actual behavior of
implementations. § When given a specification and implementation, you
should be able to evaluate whether the implementation is correct with respect
to its specification and meets performance requirements. |
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Course
Outline
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