IBM POWERPC 750GL User Manual
Page 210

 
User’s Manual
IBM PowerPC 750GX and 750GL RISC Microprocessor
Instruction Timing
Page 210 of 377
gx_06.fm.(1.2)
March 27, 2006
Fetch
The process of bringing instructions from the system memory (such as a cache or 
the main memory) into the instruction queue. 
Folding (branch folding)
On the 750GX, a branch is expunged from (folded out of) the instruction queue via 
the dispatch mechanism, without being either passed to an execution unit or given 
a position in the completion queue. Subsequent instructions are fetched from 
sequential addresses for branches-not-taken and from target addresses for 
branches-taken. 
Finish
Finishing occurs in the last cycle of execution. (This could also be the first cycle of 
execution for instructions that only require one cycle for execution.) In this cycle, 
the output Rename Register and the completion queue entry are updated to indi-
cate that the instruction has finished executing. 
Latency
 The number of clock cycles necessary to execute an instruction and make ready 
the results of that execution for a subsequent instruction.
Pipeline
In the context of instruction timing, the term ‘pipeline’ refers to the interconnection 
of the stages. The events necessary to process an instruction are broken into 
several cycle-length tasks to allow work to be performed on several instructions 
simultaneously—analogous to an assembly line. As an instruction is processed, it 
passes from one stage to the next. When it completes one stage, that stage 
becomes available for the next instruction. 
Although an individual instruction can take many cycles to complete (the number of 
cycles is called instruction latency), pipelining makes it possible to overlap the 
processing so that the throughput (number of instructions completed per cycle) is 
greater than if pipelining were not implemented.
Program order
The order of instructions in an executing program. More specifically, this term is 
used to refer to the original order in which program instructions are fetched into the 
instruction queue from the system memory. 
Rename register
Temporary buffers used to hold either source or destination values for instructions 
that are in a stage of execution. This simplifies the passing of data outside of the 
General Purpose Register (GPR) file between instructions during execution. 
Reservation station
A buffer between the dispatch and execution units where instructions await execu-
tion. 
Retirement
Removal of a completed instruction from the completion queue. At this time, any 
output from the completed instruction is written to the appropriate architected desti-
nation register. This might be a GPR, a Floating Point Register (FPR), or a Condi-
tion Register (CR) field.
