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| (Top News, 12 Mar 2010 ) |
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ARM has announced availability of phase one of the new AMBA 4 specification, providing increased functionality and efficiency for complex, media-rich on-chip communication. The AMBA specification is the de facto standard for system on-chip interconnects, and was introduced by ARM more than 15 years ago. Like its predecessor AMBA 3, introduced in 2003, the AMBA 4 specification has been designed by and for the industry with contributions from 35 of the industry’s leading OEM, semiconductor and EDA vendors.
Phase one of the AMBA 4 specification includes definition of an expanded family of AXI interconnect protocols including AXI4, AXI4-Lite and AXI4-Stream. The AXI4 protocol adds support for longer bursts and Quality of Service (QoS) signaling, and is a natural extension of the AMBA 3 specification. Long burst support aids integration of devices with large block transfers, while QoS signaling provides the ability to manage latency and bandwidth in complex multi-master systems.
The new AMBA 4 specification and the AXI4 protocols have also been extended to meet the needs of FPGA implementations. AXI4-Lite is a subset of the full AXI4 specification for simple control register interfaces, reducing SoC wiring congestion and simplifying implementation, while the AXI4-Stream protocol provides an efficient streaming interface for non address-based, point-to-point communication, such as video and audio data. Early adopters of these new specifications include Arteris, Cadence, Mentor, Sonics, Synopsys and Xilinx. Announcements regarding phase two of the new AMBA 4 specification will be issued later in 2010. These will include additional enhancements such as memory coherency and barriers support, which will simplify the software programmer’s view of the compute sub-system and reduce traffic to the external memory, further maximizing performance and power efficiency.
ARM AMBA 4 phase one specifications
ARM
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