От: EEMBC [news@eembc.org]
Отправлено: 13 февраля 2002 г.
5:54
Кому: benchpress@eembc.org
Тема: EEMBC news
EEMBC JOURNAL
NEWS FROM EMBEDDED MICROPROCESSOR BENCHMARK
CONSORTIUM
www.eembc.org
WINTER 2002
Letter from the
President: Growth on a solid foundation
When EEMBC was formed five
years ago, the embedded world was a simpler place. Most embedded processors were
general-purpose devices intended for a wide range of applications. The 46
benchmark kernels constituting the Version 1.0 EEMBC benchmarks, grouped into
five application-related suites, were sufficient to measure the performance of
any processor on the market and to provide an unprecedented representation of
the "real-world" conditions under which these devices would
operate.
Nowadays the industry is moving away from general-purpose
processors to application-specific processing, and the processors' range of
applications is growing to include tasks like VoIP, Java games and productivity
tools, and video compression that were still in their infancy at EEMBC's
inception.
It is more obvious now than even before EEMBC took the right
steps in its real-world, application-focused approach to embedded microprocessor
benchmarking. We started off with a foundation of core benchmarks (and 12
members) and now these are evolving into a more comprehensive structure (and 50
members) in which our Version 2.0 benchmarks will exercise more aspects of the
processor and the interaction of the system with the processor. Furthermore, the
use of an official validation process enabled by the EEMBC Certification Labs
(ECL) has allowed EEMBC to maintain the highest level of
credibility.
Microprocessors require a higher level of complexity to
accomplish more specialized tasks, and the same is true of an organization that
is concerned with benchmarking them. For this reason, EEMBC is organizing the
development and rollout of its Version 2.0 benchmarks around a system of
subcommittees, each of which is focused on a specific application area:
telecommunications, consumer, embedded Java, networking, office automation, and
8/16-bit microcontrollers.
Heading up these subcommittees is a group of
dedicated members of the EEMBC community, each of whom combines considerable
experience in the development of embedded processors for the specific
application that is the subcommittee's focus. These individuals also share a
passion for making industry-standard benchmarks part of the way all processors
are evaluated and marketed.
Please join me in congratulating them in
their new roles as EEMBC subcommittee chairpersons as EEMBC moves forward to
keep pace and evolve with the latest developments in the embedded
industry.
-- Markus Levy
EEMBC's New Subcommittee
Chairpersons
8-/16-bit Microcontrollers: David Lamar, NEC
Electronics
Telecommunications: Sergei Larin, BOPS, Inc.
Consumer: Alan
Weiss, EEMBC Certification Laboratories, LLC
Embedded Java: Rod Crawford, ARM
Ltd.
Networking: Bill Bryant, Sun Microsystems
Office Automation: Ron
Olson, IBM Microelectronics
Motorola Takes PowerPC Processor To Market
with Certified EEMBC Scores
In the latest example of growing industry
support for EEMBC, Motorola, Inc. made availability of EEMBC benchmark scores a
significant part of the news when it launched its new MPC7455 1-GHz processor on
January 30.
"Demonstrating the capability of the MPC7455 to serve the
processing needs of a variety of market segments, Motorola has benchmarked its 1
GHz MPC7455 processor in five different application areas using EEMBC's
out-of-the-box certification type: automotive/industrial, consumer, networking,
office automation, and telecommunications," Motorola stated in its widely
distributed press release.
The MPC7455 achieved the highest out-of-the-box
benchmark scores certified by EEMBC to date in all five application areas: 889.3
Automarks, 122.6 for Consumermarks, 30.4 Netmarks, 1238.6 OAmarks, and 27.2
Telemarks.
"The performance of Motorola's MPC7455 is tremendous," said Markus
Levy, EEMBC president. "But it is equally significant that this performance has
been certified according to objective, unbiased benchmarks that the majority of
the microprocessor vendors in the world have agreed upon. In publicizing these
scores, Motorola is helping to raise standards both for measuring processor
performance and for the way embedded processors are marketed. "
Complete
details of EEMBC benchmark scores for the MPC7455 are available free at the
EEMBC web site at www.eembc.org.
How ARM Built the ARM1026EJ-S(tm):
Synthesizable Core
Among the many first public disclosures planned for
this year's Embedded Processor Forum (April 29 through May 2 in San Jose) will
be product details of the first processor to be designed by ARM Ltd. using EEMBC
benchmarks for performance profiling and tuning the architecture. The new
ARM1026EJ-S, latest addition to the ARM10E(tm) family of processors, includes a
6-stage pipeline, 64-bit internal/external interfaces, an enhanced coprocessor
interface, static branch prediction, and parallel functional units with out of
order completion. To sign up for EPF, visit www.mdronline.com/epf.
Embedded Java will be the
topic of EEMBC conference presentations at Embedded Intelligence 2002, Wireless
Systems Design Conference and Expo, and JavaOne Conference
2002.
"Performance, Power and System Considerations in Embedded JAVA
Applications." To be presented by Markus Levy at Embedded Intelligence 2002 in
Nuremburg, Germany on February 19 at 10 a.m. Further information: http://www.elektroniknet.de/design&elektronik/emb2002.
"Evaluating
the performance of embedded Java in wireless systems." To be presented by Markus
Levy at Wireless Systems Design Conference and Expo, San Jose, February 26, at
1:30 p.m. Further information: http://www.wirelessportable.com/
"Architecting Hardware
and Software for Embedded Java." A business sessions panel discussion at JavaOne
Conference 2002 featuring presentations by Markus Levy and EEMBC members Zucotto
Wireless, ARM, and Intel. Additional presenters include representatives from
JAMDAT Mobile Inc. and Research in Motion. Tuesday March 26, 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. in
the Ralston Room at the Sheraton Palace in San Francisco. Further information:
http://java.sun.com/javaone.
See EEMBC at
Embedded Systems 2002, Embedded Systems Conference West, and Embedded Processor
Forum
EEMBC's first trade show appearance this year will be at
Embedded Systems 2002 in Nuremburg, Germany, where consortium member
Green Hills Software will host an EEMBC display at its booth. The show takes
place February 19 through 21; you'll find Green Hills Software in Hall 12, Aisle
L09. Additional show information can be found at http://www.embedded-systems-messe.de.
At this year's
Embedded Systems Conference in San Francisco, EEMBC's exhibit will
feature special demonstrations by Infineon Technologies and NEC Electronics. See
it all at booth 4557 at Moscone Center, March 13-15. More information is
available at http://www.esconline.com/sf/.
EEMBC's final conference
appearance this Spring will take place at the Embedded Processor Forum
Expo, being held on the night of April 30. The embedded industry's most
important week of the year, EPF 2002 will run April 29 through May 2 at the
Fairmont Hotel in San Jose. Focused exclusively on microprocessors and related
hardware technologies that are driving the embedded industry, the forum is the
most important place in the industry to present and hear new chip announcements.
Further information is available at http://www.mdronline.com/epf.
If you do not wish to receive e-mail from EEMBC, you can un-subscribe by
accessing the following link: http://www.eembc.org/asp/unsubscribe.asp.
If you've forgotten your EEMBC user ID, please send an E-mail to
webmaster@eembc.org and we will manually un-subscribe you. EEMBC sends no more
than one E-mail per month to registered users at www.eembc.org. Continuing your subscription ensures you'll
be notified when new scores and other important announcements are available.