Pentium Pro

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Pentium Pro
Central processing unit

Pentium Pro with 256 KB L2-Cache
Produced: November 1, 1995
Manufacturer: Intel
Max CPU clock: 150 MHz to 200 MHz
FSB speeds: 60 MHz to 66 MHz
Min feature size: 0.35 µm to 0.50 µm
Instruction set: x86
Microarchitecture: P6
Cores: 1
Socket: Socket 8

The Pentium Pro is a sixth-generation (P6 core) x86 architecture microprocessor produced by Intel in November 1995, and it was originally intended to replace the original Pentium in a full range of applications. While the Pentium and Pentium MMX had 3.1 and 4.5 million transistors, respectively, the Pentium Pro contained 5.5 million transistors. Later, it was reduced to a more narrow role as a server and high-end desktop chip. The Pentium Pro was capable of both dual- and quad-processor configurations. It only came in one form factor, the relatively large rectangular Socket 8.

In 1997, the Pentium Pro was succeeded by the Pentium II processor, which was essentially a cost-reduced and re-branded Pentium Pro with the addition of MMX and enhanced 16-bit code performance. Costs were reduced by using standard SRAM cache chips running at half-speed, which increased production yields. The next year, in 1998, Intel split the market into three segments: budget workstations and home users, higher-end workstations and power users, and multi-processor capable servers. Those segments were served by the Celeron, the Pentium II, and the Pentium II Xeon, respectively.

The Pentium Pro (given the Intel product code 80521), was the first generation of the P6 architecture, which would carry Intel well into the next decade. The design would scale from its initial 150 MHz start, all the way up to 1.4 GHz with the "Tualatin" Pentium III. The Pentium Pro had a theoretical performance of 400 MFLOPS. [1] The core's various traits would continue after that in the derivative core called "Banias" in Pentium M and Intel Core (Yonah), which itself would evolve into Core architecture (Core 2 processor) in 2006 and onward.

Contents

[edit] Performance

Pentium Pro 512 KB in PGA package
Pentium Pro 512 KB in PGA package
Pentium Pro 1 MB in PPGA package
Pentium Pro 1 MB in PPGA package
Uncapped Pentium Pro 256 KB
Uncapped Pentium Pro 256 KB
Pentium II Overdrive with heatsink removed.  Deschutes core is on left.  512 KB cache is on right.
Pentium II Overdrive with heatsink removed. Deschutes core is on left. 512 KB cache is on right.

Performance with 32-bit code was excellent and well ahead of the older Pentium at the time, by 25-35%; however, the Pentium Pro's 16-bit performance was approximately only 20% faster than a Pentium at running 16-bit code. It was this, along with the Pentium Pro's high price, due in part to the full speed L2 cache, that caused the rather lackluster reception for the chip among many home PC enthusiasts, given the dominance at the time of the 16-bit Windows 3.1x and MS-DOS. Windows 95 had already been released at the time of the introduction of the Pentium Pro, but some parts of Windows 95 itself (for example, USER) were still mostly 16-bit. To truly gain the full advantages of Pentium Pro's architecture, one was forced to run a fully 32-bit OS. Microsoft's only truly 32-bit OS at the time was Windows NT 3.51.

Despite the name, the Pentium Pro was actually a completely new architecture, very different from Intel's earlier Pentium processor. The Pentium Pro (P6) core featured an array of advanced RISC technologies, although it wasn't the first x86 CPU with such approach -- before it, the NexGen Nx586 processor already utilized internal x86 translation to its own proprietary RISC86TM instruction set. Perhaps the most obvious sign that things had changed was that the CPU's "front end" decoded the old IA32 instructions into micro-instructions which the Pro's RISC core then processed. The core of Pentium Pro featured several technologies previously found mostly in RISC processors, including: speculative execution, superpipelining, register renaming, out of order execution, and a wider 36-bit address bus (usable by PAE).

After the microprocessor was released a bug was discovered in the floating point unit, commonly called the "Pentium Pro and Pentium II FPU bug" and by Intel as the "flag erratum". The bug occurs under some circumstances during floating-point to integer conversion when the floating-point number won't fit into the smaller integer format causing the FPU to deviate from its documented behaviour. The bug is considered to be minor and occurs under such special circumstances that very few, if any, software programs are affected.

[edit] An innovation in cache

Likely Pentium Pro's most noticeable addition was its on-package L2 cache, which ranged from 256 KB at introduction to 1 MB in 1997. At the time, manufacturing technology did not feasibly allow a large L2 cache to be integrated into the processor core. Intel instead placed the L2 die(s) separately in the package which still allowed it to run at the same clock speed as the CPU core. Additionally, unlike most motherboard-based cache schemes that shared the main system bus with the CPU, the Pentium Pro's cache had its own backside bus (called dual independent bus by Intel). Because of this, the CPU could read main memory and cache concurrently, greatly reducing a traditional bottleneck. The cache was also "non-blocking", meaning that the processor could issue more than one cache request at a time (up to 4), reducing cache-miss penalties. (This is an example of MLP, Memory Level Parallelism.) These properties combined to produce an L2 cache that was immensely faster than the motherboard-based caches of older processors. This cache alone gave the CPU an advantage in input/output performance over older x86 CPUs. In multiprocessor configurations, Pentium Pro's integrated cache skyrocketed performance in comparison to architectures which had each CPU sharing a central cache.

However, this far faster L2 cache did come with some complications. The Pentium Pro's "on-package cache" arrangement was unique. The processor and the cache were on separate dies in the same package and connected closely by a full-speed bus. The two or three dies had to be bonded together early in the production process, before testing was possible. This meant that a single, tiny flaw in either die made it necessary to discard the entire assembly, which was one of the reasons for the Pentium Pro's relatively low production yield and high cost. All versions of the chip were expensive, those with 1024 KB being particularly so, since it required two 512 KB cache dies as well as the processor die.

[edit] Available models

Pentium Pro clock speeds were 150, 166, 180 or 200 MHz with a 60 or 66 MHz external bus clock. Some users chose to overclock their Pentium Pro chips, with the 200 MHz version often being run at 233 MHz, and the 150 MHz version often being run at 166 MHz. The chip was popular in symmetric multiprocessing configurations, with dual and quad SMP server and workstation setups being commonplace.

In Intel's "Family/Model/Stepping" scheme, the Pentium Pro is family 6, model 1, and its Intel Product code is 80521.

[edit] Evolution in fabrication

As time progressed, the process used to fab the Pentium Pro changed, leading to a combination of processes used in the same package:

  • The 150 MHz Pentium Pro processor die used a 0.50 μm BiCMOS process.
  • The 166, 180, and 200 MHz Pentium Pro processor die used a 0.35 μm CMOS process.
  • The 256 KB L2 cache die used a 0.50 μm BiCMOS process.
  • The 512 and 1024 KB L2 cache die used a 0.35 μm CMOS process.

[edit] Upgrade paths

In 1998, the 300/333 MHz Pentium II Overdrive processor for Socket 8 was released. Featuring 512 KB of full-speed cache, it was produced by Intel as a drop-in upgrade option for owners of Pentium Pro systems (the BIOS of the motherboard sometimes had to be updated). However, reflecting its Pentium II heritage, it only supported single or dual-processor operation, which did not make it a usable upgrade for high end quad-processor systems.

As Slot 1 motherboards became prevalent, several manufacturers released slockets, such as the Tyan M2020, Asus C-P6S1, Tekram P6SL1 and the Abit KP6, to allow Pentium Pro processors to be used in them. The Intel 440FX chipset explicitly supports both Pentium Pro and Pentium II processors so using a slocket with them is straightforward. However, since the Intel 440BX and later Slot 1 chipsets do not explicitly support the Pentium Pro, the only Socket 8 processor that will usually work with a slocket in such a motherboard is the Pentium II Overdrive, since it is in essence a Pentium II processor.

[edit] Core specifications

[edit] Pentium Pro

[edit] Pentium II Overdrive

  • L1 cache: 16 + 16 KB (Data + Instructions)
  • L2 cache: 512 KB external chip on CPU module running at 100% of CPU speed
  • Socket: Socket 8
  • Multiplier: Locked at 5x
  • Front side bus: 60 and 66 MHz
  • VCore: 3.1-3.3 V (Has on-board voltage regulator)
  • Fabrication: 0.25 µm
  • Based on the Deschutes-generation Pentium II
  • First release: 1997
  • Supports MMX technology

[edit] Pentium Pro / 6th generation competitors

[edit] References

[edit] See also

[edit] External links