Ignite (microprocessor)

IGNITE (formerly ShBoom and PSC 1000) is a stack-based RISC microprocessor architecture.[1] The architecture was originally developed by Nanotronics, which was later acquired by Patriot Scientific Corporation. The IGNITE microprocessor is one of the few commercially produced microprocessors that use a stack-based computation model. Target applications for this unique architecture were primarily embedded devices (due to the processor's low power consumption) as well as efficient implementation of virtual stack machines, such as the Java Virtual Machine or the stack machine underlying the Forth programming language. The IGNITE processor was never successful in the market.

IGNITE
An IGNITE Ia microprocessor
DesignerNanotronics, PTSC
Bits32-bit
Introduced1994
DesignRISC
TypeStack machine
EndiannessBig
Registers
General purpose52 (including stacks)

Notable Features

Besides its unusual stack-based architecture, the IGNITE microprocessor had several other features, such as micro loops and up to four instructions per 32-bit instruction word.

gollark: Um.
gollark: I wonder why it's external; that'd be more work than using the actual DC database.
gollark: Bug TJ09 enough and it could happen!
gollark: I mean, a very dedicated cat on your keyboard/mouse could.
gollark: ←↑↓→

References

  1. PSC1000 Microprocessor Reference Manual. Patriot Scientific Corporation. 1999.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.