Difference between revisions of "Programming multicore microcontrollers"

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XMOS is a silicon manufacturer who specialise in multicore microcontrollers. Each chip can contain 4 to 16 XCOREs, each capable of running a seperate task. They share on chip memory, and can be connected to external I/O. An XMOS controller can also be fitted with analog capabilities, or physical interfaces like an USB PHY. Also, the XCOREs inside the microcontroller is equipped with a dedicated multiplier, ideal for performing DSP tasks. The controller runs at a decent 400MHz-500MHz and is capable of doing 1000 MIPS. With these numbers, XMOS controllers easily outperform any Arduino board, and give twice the processing power of the fastest single core microcontrollers.
 
XMOS is a silicon manufacturer who specialise in multicore microcontrollers. Each chip can contain 4 to 16 XCOREs, each capable of running a seperate task. They share on chip memory, and can be connected to external I/O. An XMOS controller can also be fitted with analog capabilities, or physical interfaces like an USB PHY. Also, the XCOREs inside the microcontroller is equipped with a dedicated multiplier, ideal for performing DSP tasks. The controller runs at a decent 400MHz-500MHz and is capable of doing 1000 MIPS. With these numbers, XMOS controllers easily outperform any Arduino board, and give twice the processing power of the fastest single core microcontrollers.
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[[File:xmos_core_layout.png]]

Revision as of 15:10, 22 November 2014

Project: Programming multicore microcontrollers
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State Active
Members Danny Witberg
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Description This project describes the programming of multicore microcontrollers
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Introduction

Microcontroller until now were mostly single cores based, but XMOS introduced a microcontroller where multiple processes can run at once. This can be a great advantage where time critical processes can be handled simultaneously. If you want to do that on a single core microcontroller, you would have to handle the two threads with interrupts or some other means of dividing the available processing power onto the several tasks.

This project shows how multicore microcontrollers are programmed, and how several tasks are handled in an extension to the C language. It also shows how different tasks can communicate with each other, and how timed I/O can assist in achieving higher communication transfer speeds.

XMOS microcontrollers

XMOS is a silicon manufacturer who specialise in multicore microcontrollers. Each chip can contain 4 to 16 XCOREs, each capable of running a seperate task. They share on chip memory, and can be connected to external I/O. An XMOS controller can also be fitted with analog capabilities, or physical interfaces like an USB PHY. Also, the XCOREs inside the microcontroller is equipped with a dedicated multiplier, ideal for performing DSP tasks. The controller runs at a decent 400MHz-500MHz and is capable of doing 1000 MIPS. With these numbers, XMOS controllers easily outperform any Arduino board, and give twice the processing power of the fastest single core microcontrollers.

Xmos core layout.png