EEMBC Publishes Benchmark Scores for Infineon Technologies' Carmel DSP Core And TriCore TC11IB Microcontroller
EL DORADO HILLS, Calif., March 13 /PRNewswire/ -- EEMBC, the Embedded
Microprocessor Benchmark Consortium, today announced that it has published
EEMBC benchmark scores for Infineon Technologies' (NYSE: IFX; FSE) Carmel DSP
Core and TriCore TC11IB microcontroller.
The 170-MHz Carmel DSP, tested against EEMBC's Telecomm benchmark suite,
scored 4.8 Telemarks.
Infineon used its Infineon IC3 compiler to produce
EEMBC out-of-the-box benchmark scores.
"The EEMBC Certification Laboratories (ECL) is pleased to have certified
Infineon's Carmel DSP for the EEMBC benchmark scores for Telecomm," said ECL
Chairman and CTO Alan R. Weiss.
"Infineon takes EEMBC real-world benchmarking
seriously, and its C compiler contributes positively to the overall
performance of this processor."
Infineon Technologies' Carmel DSP is a 16-bit, fixed-point DSP core
targeted at advanced wireless and wired communications applications.
Designed
for integration in complete system-on-a-chip (SoC) implementations, the Carmel
core delivers high performance and efficient DSP MIPS without sacrificing
power dissipation and code compactness requirements.
The Configurable Long
Instruction Word (CLIW) architecture sets the core apart by allowing VLIW
performance at costs comparable to traditional, less-flexible DSP
architectures.
"The excellent benchmark certification results achieved running
'out-of-the-box' tests on the Carmel DSP core are a testimony to the
efficiency of the compiler developed for deployment of Carmel-based system
chips," said Alex Bedarida, vice president for DSP cores at Infineon
Technologies.
"System developers are increasingly moving to C-compiled code
in DSP applications in order to optimize code re-usability and time to market.
This makes compiler performance a keystone of product evaluations, and we now
have well-recognized industry-standard benchmark recognition for Carmel DSP."
A 96-MHz Infineon TC11IB, tested against EEMBC's Automotive/Industrial
benchmark suite, scored 33 Automarks.
Infineon used Tasking's Tricore
V1.4r1 compiler to produce EEMBC out-of-the-box benchmark scores.
"The TC11IB is a general purpose, industrial controller embedding
Infineon's TriCore Unified Processor core, which combines RISC and DSP
instruction sets in a single, highly efficient architecture," said Walter
Croce, director of marketing for 32-bit cores at Infineon Technologies.
"The
inherent performance advantages of the unified core are well illustrated by
the EEMBC benchmarks.
By evaluating real-world performance instead of
arbitrary parameters, we are able to show the 'best-in-its-class' performance
of the microcontroller using the industry's best benchmarking system."
Incorporating advanced communication peripherals and external interfaces,
the 32-bit TC11IB microcontroller is designed for robust performance in
embedded applications such as Programmable Logic Control, slot CPU in a PC,
and industrial communications.
Operating at a 96-MHz clock rate and featuring
1.5 MB of embedded DRAM memory, the microcontroller supports sophisticated
real-time operating systems and is capable of handling floating point
calculations entirely from software libraries.
ECL's Weiss commented, "Infineon is taking positive steps to make sure
that people have accurate, certified performance information on their
processors.
It's important to show customers and prospects that you are
committed to benchmarking more than a single processor.
At ECL, we accurately
recreated Infineon's TriCore TC11IB processor benchmark platform, and we're
enthused to have certified Infineon's EEMBC Automotive/Industrial benchmark
scores."
Detailed EEMBC benchmark score reports for both the Carmel DSP Core and
TriCore TC11IB microcontroller are available now for free at the EEMBC web
site, www.eembc.org .
About EEMBC
EEMBC, the Embedded Microprocessor Benchmark Consortium, develops and
certifies real-world benchmarks and benchmark scores to help designers select
the right embedded processors for their systems.
Every processor submitted
for EEMBC benchmarking is tested for parameters representing different
workloads and capabilities in communications, networking, consumer, office
automation, automotive/industrial, embedded Java, and microcontroller-related
applications.
With members including leading semiconductor, intellectual
property, and compiler companies, EEMBC establishes benchmark standards and
provides certified benchmarking results through the EEMBC Certification Labs
(ECL) in Texas and California.
EEMBC members include:
Agere Systems, Altera, ARC, ARM, BOPS, Cadence,
ChipWrights, DSP Group, Equator Technologies, Fujitsu Microelectronics, Green
Hills Software, Hewlett-Packard, Hitachi America Ltd., Improv Systems, IBM
Corporation, Imsys, Infineon Technologies, Intel, LSI Logic, Metaware,
Metrowerks, Microchip Technology, MIPS Technologies Inc., Mitsubishi Electric,
Motorola, National Semiconductor, Nazomi Communications, NEC, Oki
Semiconductor, Panasonic, Parthus, Philips Semiconductors, PMC-Sierra,
Precise, Red Hat, SandCraft, STMicroelectronics, Siroyan Ltd., Sun
Microsystems, Tensilica, Texas Instruments, Toshiba, TriMedia Technologies,
Vulcan Machines, Wind River (DIAB), Xilinx, and Zucotto Wireless.
EEMBC is a registered trademark of the Embedded Microprocessor Benchmark
Consortium.
All other trademarks appearing herein are the property of their
respective owners.