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The Toshiba / MIPS R4000 Processor
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The MIPS R4000 series, released in 1991, extended the MIPS instruction set to a full 64-bit architecture and moved the FPU onto the main die to create a single-chip system. The design was so important to SGI, at the time MIPS' major customer, that SGI bought the company in 1992.
The R4x00 processors have been available and used in different versions. PC (as in R4000PC) denotes primary cache only and SC denotes secondary cache. The MC versions contain special support for cache architectures in multiprocessor systems.
R4000 processors where used in many Silicon Graphics computers, e.g. the Indigo workstations and
Crimson servers.
References:
MIPS R4000 Microprocessor User's Guide
R4000 at SGIstuff
Note: The last two digits of the part number on older Toshiba R4000 processors is the external clock speed, internal is twice that. |
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The Toshiba R4400 Processor
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The MIPS R4000 series, released in 1991, extended the MIPS instruction set to a full 64-bit architecture and moved the FPU onto the main die to create a single-chip system.
The design was so important to SGI, at the time MIPS' major customer, that SGI bought the company in 1992.
A number of improved versions soon followed, including the R4400.
The R4x00 processors have been available and used in different versions. PC (as in R4400PC) denotes primary cache only and SC denotes secondary cache.
The MC versions contain special support for cache architectures in multiprocessor systems.
R4400 processors where used in many Silicon Graphics computers, e.g. the Indigo2 workstations,
Onyx supercomputers and
Challenge servers.
References:
MIPS R4400 Product Information
R4400 at SGIstuff
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The Toshiba / MIPS R10000 Processor
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