ARM Cortex-A5
Designed by | ARM Holdings |
---|---|
Common manufacturer(s) | |
Microarchitecture | ARMv7-A |
Cores | 1-4 |
L1 cache | 4-64 KB/4-64 KB |
The ARM Cortex-A5 is a 32-bit processor core licensed by ARM Holdings implementing the ARMv7-A architecture.
Overview
Main article: Comparison of ARMv7-A cores
The Cortex-A5 is intended to replace the ARM9 and ARM11 cores for use in low-end devices.[1] The Cortex-A5 offers features of the ARM v7 architecture focusing on internet applications e.g. VFPv4 and NEON advanced SIMD.[2]
Key features of the Cortex-A5 core are:
- Single-issue, in-order microarchitecture with an 8-stage pipeline[1]
- NEON SIMD instruction set extension (optional)
- VFPv4 floating-point unit (optional)
- Thumb-2 instruction set encoding
- Jazelle RCT
- 1.57 DMIPS / MHz
Chips
Several system-on-chips (SoC) have implemented the Cortex-A5 core, including:
- Atmel SAMA5D3
- Freescale Vybrid Series
- Snapdragon S4 Play
- Spreadtrum SC8810 (single core A5 1 GHz + Mali400 GPU)
- Actions Semiconductor ATM7029 (gs702a) is a quad-core Cortex-A5 configuration
- 2013 AMD Fusion APUs will include a Cortex-A5 as a security co-processor[3]
See also
- ARM architecture
- List of ARM cores
- List of applications of ARM cores
- Comparison of ARMv7-A cores
- JTAG
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Jon Stokes (Oct 23, 2009). "ARM fills out CPU lineup with Cortex A5". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
- ↑ "Cortex-A5 Processor". February 2015.
- ↑ Ryan Smith (2012-06-13). "AMD 2013 APUs To Include ARM Cortex-A5 Processor For TrustZone Capabilities". AnandTech. Retrieved 2012-10-17.
External links
- ARM Holdings
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