cs470 - Spring 1997


Goal

To give students an unitary view of factors deciding what the architecture of a computer is. Design, Computer Organization and Assembly Language are presented in their complex interaction.


Section 11 Section 12 Section 13
Instructor Virgil Bistriceanu
Lecture M 10:10 am - 11:50 am, SB-225
Lab W 10:10-11:50 am R 10:10-11:50 am F 10:10-11:50 am
Lab room SB-108
Office hours M 2:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Office SB-110
Phone (312) 567-5146
Fax (312) 567-5067
e-mail virgil@csam.iit.edu
Teaching Assistant
  • Kuo-Pao Yang
  • Office hours:
    • T 4:30 - 5:30 pm in SB-112I
    • W 9:00 - 10:00 am in SB-108
  • Phone: N/A
  • email: yangkuo@charlie.iit.edu


Textbook

"Computer Organization & Design"
David Patterson, John Hennessy
Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc. 1994
ISBN 1-55860-281-X

Grading

Everything you have to turn in is due at the beginning of the class the day the work is due. For late submittal there is a 10% per business day penalty. Penalties start from the moment the class the work is due starts.

Exams are open-book(s) open-notes.

Failure to take a passing grade in either exams, project, lab or homeworks earns you a failing grade.

Class attendance and participation will help settle the borderline grades. Regular class attendance is important and students are expected to actively participate in class: questions and comments are always welcome.


Topics

  1. Fundamentals of computer design. (2)
  2. Basic organization of a von Neumann computer. (2)
  3. Instruction set design. (5)
  4. Addressing modes. (3)
  5. CPU implementation. (6)
  6. Interrupts. (3)
  7. The memory hierarchy 1: general design principles. (1)
  8. The memory hierarchy 2: the cache. (2)
  9. The memory hierarchy 3: main memory. (2)
  10. Virtual memory. (2)

Important events


Varia

Unless otherwise stated all papers you turn in will be TYPED. No handwritten work is accepted. Each page will have a header as follows:

Each page will also have a footer:

The header and the footer will be Arial, 10 points, regular. The text for the paper itself will be typed using Times Roman (12 points regular, except for titles which may be larger and bold).

Click here to see a template.