- Source: ARM Cortex-A
The ARM Cortex-A is a group of 32-bit and 64-bit RISC ARM processor cores licensed by Arm Holdings. The cores are intended for application use. The group consists of 32-bit only cores: ARM Cortex-A5, ARM Cortex-A7, ARM Cortex-A8, ARM Cortex-A9, ARM Cortex-A12, ARM Cortex-A15, ARM Cortex-A17 MPCore, and ARM Cortex-A32, 32/64-bit mixed operation cores: ARM Cortex-A35, ARM Cortex-A53, ARM Cortex-A55, ARM Cortex-A57, ARM Cortex-A72, ARM Cortex-A73, ARM Cortex-A75, ARM Cortex-A76, ARM Cortex-A77, ARM Cortex-A78, ARM Cortex-A710, and ARM Cortex-A510 Refresh, and 64-bit only cores: ARM Cortex-A34, ARM Cortex-A65, ARM Cortex-A510 (2021), ARM Cortex-A715, ARM Cortex-A520, and ARM Cortex-A720.
The 32-bit ARM Cortex-A cores, except for the Cortex-A32, implement the ARMv7-A profile of the ARMv7 architecture. The main distinguishing feature of the ARMv7-A profile, compared to the other two profiles, the ARMv7-R profile implemented by the ARM Cortex-R cores and the ARMv7-M profile implemented by most of the ARM Cortex-M cores, is that only the ARMv7-A profile includes a memory management unit (MMU). Many modern operating systems require a MMU to run.
The 64-bit ARM Cortex-A cores as well as the 32-bit ARM Cortex-A32 implement the ARMv8-A profile of the ARMv8 architecture.
Overview
= ARM license
=Arm Holdings neither manufactures nor sells CPU devices based on its own designs, but rather licenses the processor architecture to interested parties. ARM offers a variety of licensing terms, varying in cost and deliverables. To all licensees, ARM provides an integratable hardware description of the ARM core, as well as complete software development toolset, and the right to sell manufactured silicon containing the ARM CPU.
= Silicon customization
=Integrated device manufacturers (IDM) receive the ARM Processor IP as synthesizable RTL (written in Verilog). In this form, they have the ability to perform architectural level optimizations and extensions. This allows the manufacturer to achieve custom design goals, such as higher clock speed, very low power consumption, instruction set extensions, optimizations for size, debug support, etc. To determine which components have been included in an ARM IC chip, consult the manufacturer datasheet and related documentation.
= Instruction sets
=The Cortex-A5 / A7 / A8 / A9 / A12 / A15 / A17 cores implement the ARMv7-A architecture. The Cortex-A32 / A34 / A35 / A53 / A57 / A72 / A73 cores implement the ARMv8-A architecture. ARMv8-A architecture provides exclusive loads and stores instructions as synchronization primitives. The Cortex-A55 / A65 / A75 / A76 / A77 / A78 cores implement the ARMv8.2-A architecture. The Cortex-A510, A710 and A715 cores implement the ARMv9-A architecture. The Cortex-A520 and A720 cores implement the ARMv9.2-A architecture
Documentation
A typical top-down documentation tree is:
IC Manufacturer's high-level marketing slides
IC Manufacturer datasheet for the exact physical chip
IC Manufacturer Reference Manuals — describes common peripherals and other aspects of physical chips within the same series
ARM Core Reference Manuals — for the exact ARM core processor within the chip
ARM Architecture Reference Manuals — includes detailed description of all instruction sets of the core
IC Manufacturers usually have additional documents, including: evaluation board user manuals, application notes, getting started with development software, software library documents, errata, and more.
See also
ARM architecture family
Comparison of ARMv7-A cores
Comparison of ARMv8-A cores
JTAG, SWD
List of ARM processors
References
External links
ARM Cortex-A official documents
ARM Cortex-A official website
Quick Reference Cards
Instructions: Thumb (1), ARM and Thumb-2 (2), Vector Floating-Point (3) – arm.com
Opcodes: Thumb (1, 2), ARM (3, 4), GNU Assembler Directives (5).
Migrating
Migrating from MIPS to ARM – arm.com
Migrating from PPC to ARM – arm.com
Migrating from SH-4 to Cortex-A – arm.com
Migrating from IA-32 (x86-32) to ARM – arm.com
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Arsitektur ARM
- Exynos
- AArch64
- Samsung Galaxy J2 Prime
- Arduino
- Qualcomm Snapdragon
- Nuvoton
- PlayStation Vita
- Samsung Galaxy Tab
- Samsung Galaxy Note 4
- ARM Cortex-A
- ARM Cortex-M
- ARM architecture family
- ARM Cortex-X4
- ARM Cortex-A720
- ARM Cortex-A53
- ARM Cortex-R
- ARM Cortex-A76
- ARM Cortex-A55
- ARM Cortex-A7