| IBM Microelectronics Division. The PowerPC 440 core, 1999. |
....cache to be locked in place. Disabling the normal replacement mechanism, provided that the cache contents is known, makes the time required for a memory access predictable. This ability to lock cache contents is available on several commercial processors (PowerPC 604e [16] 405 and 440 families [8], Intel 960, some Intel x86, Motorola MPC7400 and others) Each processor implements cache locking in several ways, allowing in all cases static locking (the cache is loaded and locked at system start) and dynamic locking (the state of the cache is allowed to change during the system execution) ....
IBM Microelectronics Division. The PowerPC 440 core, 1999.
....cache to be locked in place. Disabling the normal replacement mechanism, provided that the cache contents are known, makes the time required for a memory access predictable. This ability to lock cache contents is available on several commercial processors (PowerPC 604e [25] 405 and 440 families [15], Intel 960, some Intel x86, Motorola MPC7400 and others) Each processor implements cache locking in several ways, allowing in all cases static locking (the cache is loaded and locked at system start) and dynamic locking (the state of the cache is allowed to change during the system execution) ....
IBM Microelectronics Division. The PowerPC 440 core, 1999.
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IBM Microelectronics Division. The PowerPC 440 core, 1999.
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