Transcript Clock skew

Clock Distribution – from Past to Present
• A synchronous system needs a clock which signals are synchronized
with
• Clock distribution network: goal is to generate a clock signal in which
you want the clock to arrive at the same time at equivalent points on
the chip
• Problem – Clock skew
– Clock skew – mismatches in wire delays can cause differences in arrival
times at equivalent points in the clocks. Can only predict the arrival time
of the clock at clock arrival = Y +/- Skew
– Clock skew must accounted for in timing budget when determing delay
paths to meet setup/hold constraints
– Clock skew is THE problem – everything else, such as power costs with
regards to the clock distribution system, comes from trying to solve the
clock skew problem
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Clock Distribution
clk
100 ps
100 ps
want clk to arrive at same time
at equivalent parts of chip
0 ps
reference point
100 ps
100 ps
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Clock Distribution (cont)
clk
100 ps
100 ps
Data
if clock arrival is known, can
accurately compute delay
constraints when sending data
from one register to another
0 ps
reference point
100 ps
100 ps
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Clocking Regions
skew to neighboring region: 11 ps
local skew: 6 ps
clk
98 ps
102 ps
99 ps
local skew: 6 ps
103 ps
92 ps
97 ps
96 ps
93 ps
0 ps
reference point
100 ps
100 ps
Chip is divided into regions, the further a signal has to travel, the
larger the skew budget
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Skew: Flip-Flops
Q1
F1
t pd  Tc   t pcq  tsetup  tskew 
clk
Combinational Logic
D2
F2
clk
Tc
sequencing overhead
clk
tcd  thold  tccq  tskew
tpcq
Q1
tskew
tpdq
tsetup
D2
F1
clk
Skew adds to both setup
and hold when calculating
constraints
Q1
CL
D2
F2
clk
tskew
clk
thold
Q1 tccq
D2
Source: David Harrison
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tcd
5
Clock Distribution Evolution
• Alpha 21064 (1993, 750 nm), 150-200 MHz: Global Clock/1
driver/gridded clock, 180 ps clock skew
• Alpha 21164 (1995, 500 nm), 300 Mhz –Global Clock, 2 drivers,
gridded clock, 80 ps clock skew,
• Alpha 21264 (1997/ 350 nm) 500-600 MHz, Clock distribution network
– global/local/conditional clocks – deskew by delay insertion, gridded
global clock, 65 ps clock skew
• IA-64 Gen1 (2000/180 nm) 800 MHz, H-tree global clock, active deskew (distributed PLLs), 28 ps skew
• IA-64 Gen2 (2002/180 nm) 1 GHz, H-tree global clock, regional clocks,
NO active deskew, 62 ps skew
• IA-64 Gen3 (2003/130 nm) 1.5 GHz, H-tree global clock, regional
clocks, fuse-based deskew, 7 ps (scan based) to 24 ps (fuse based)
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Clock Distribution Evolution (cont)
• IA-64 Dual-core (2004/90 nm) 2.5 GHz (Montecito), Htree and balanced binary-tree routing, regional clocks,
active regional deskew, 10 ps skew
• Xeon Dual-core (2006/65 nm) 3.4 GHz (Tulsa) – two
different clock systems
– Core clocks (clocks for processor cores) uses same core clock
scheme as used in Xeon Single Core (2003,/90 nm). This clock
scheme was designed to scale up to 6 GHz, and used a H-tree
distributed clock with shorted nodes that had produced less than 10
ps skew. No active de-skew or fuse-based de-skew.
– Un-core clock (everything outside the core) – Cache, bus logic,
etc. Large area prevented use of gridded clock (power restriction),
used a clock tree (9 vertical, 2 horizontal) with fuse-based deskew
at root of each vertical spine. Achieved less than 11 ps skew.
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Definition: Gridded Clock
In early clock distribution systems, large drivers + metal clock grid used for clock
distribution. Subsystems just tapped into the clock grid for connectivity – easy to
do, but takes a lot of power, chews up routing resources (grid density is
exaggerated in this picture, there is a lot more white space than is shown
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Alpha 21064 Die
Photo (1993)
Single Clock driver,
2 transistors for
buffer visible to
naked eye
Clocking scheme was
2 phase, single wire.
Clock load was 3.5 nF
Gate length of final
driver was 35 cm (not
a misprint, used
serpentine layout to
get this gate length).
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21064 Clock Skew Distribution
Max clock skew approx.
180 ps (3.6% of 5 ns clock
period) – 1 gate delay about
300 ps, so clock skew about
50% of a gate delay.
Note the skew is
smallest closest
to center of chip
where driver is
located.
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Thermal Image of 20164
76C at center of
chip
46C at edges of
chip
30C thermal gradient across chip!!
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21164 Clock Distribution (1995)
Goal of 21164 Clock distribution was to reduce skew by 30%
and reduce the thermal gradient.
A predriver was centered between two main clock drivers
Predriver
Clock skew was reduced by
factor of 2, and thermal
gradient was reduced.
Main clock drivers
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Max clock skew approx.
80 ps (2.4% of 3.3 ns clock
period) – 1 gate delay about
240 ps, so clock skew about
1/3 of a gate delay.
Clock skew lowest
near two main clock
drivers.
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Aside: Why a Gridded Clock?
• Both 21064, 21164 used a single global clk distributed by a
metal clock grid.
• Skew is largely determined by grid interconnect density and is
insensitive to gate load placement
– Why? Because capacitance of grid wiring dominates the gate loads
connected to it.
• Universal availability of clock signals
• Design teams can proceed in parallel since clock constraints
well known
• Good process-variation tolerance
• The disadvantage is the extra capacitance of the grid
– Power-performance tradeoff is determined by choice of skew target,
which establishes the needed grid density, which determines the clock
driver size.
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21264 Clock Distribution (1997)
• 21264 clocking fundamentally different from previous
Alphas because it supported a hierarchy of clocks
– Still had a GCLK (global Clk) grid, but conditional and local clocks
had several buffer stages after GCLK
• Conditional clocks used to save power
– Clocks gated to functional units in design
– If not executing a floating point instruction, then stop the clock to the
floating point unit to save power!
• State elements and clocking points were 0 to 8 gates past
Gclk
• Six major regional clocks two gain stages past GCLK with
grids juxaposed with GCLK, but shielded from it.
– Major clocks drive local clocks and conditional clocks
• Goals were to improve performance, reduce power.
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Clock Hierarchy of 21264
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21264 Global Clock Distribution
Window pane arrangement - same skew to all ‘panes’ . Note
redudant drive to clock nets
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Phased Lock Loops (PLLs)
• PLLs and Delay Locked Loops (DLLs) are used to
perform clock multiplication of an off-chip clock
– PLLs/DLLs used to align clock edges of original clock with
multiplied clocks
• PLLs are analog circuits that use a charge pump and a
voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) to perform phase
alignment
– Alpha 21264 PLL used a separate, regulated 3.3 V supply and was
located in the corner of the chip to minimize noise impact
– Section 9.5.2 of Rabaey text has a block diagram of a PLL
• All high performance CPUs and most ASICs now include
a PLL for internal clock generation
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Global clock grid.
Uses 3% of
M3/M4 routing
layers
(lines in picture
are misleadingly
thick).
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All GCLK lines are laterally shielded by Vss/Vdd
signal
GCLK
Vss
signal
Vdd
Lateral shielding via Vss/Vdd prevents clock noise from
coupling into signal lines.
Clock wires and lateral shields were manually placed
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Simulated worst case
GCLK skew was
72 ps .
Skew on M1, M2 was
less than 10 ps.
Measured worst case
GCLK skew via ebeam
tester was 65 ps
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Major clocks are two
inversions past GCLK
Major clocks saved power over a single global clocks because
they service a lighter load and distribution area is smaller –
both of these means smaller drivers are needed.
Gclk+Major clocks used 24 W @ 2.2 V, 600 Mhz. It is
estimated that at least 40W would have been required if only
global clocks were used. 10%-90% rise/fall times were
targeted at < 320 ps.
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Major Clock grids.
Densest major clock
grids used up to 6% of
M3/M4 routing.
White areas are
serviced by local
clocks, local clocks
also present in major
clock grids.
Major clocks also
laterally shielded.
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Local, Conditional Clocks
• Local clocks generated from any clock – GCLK, Major
clocks, other local clocks
• Local clocks were neither shielded or gridded
• Having local clocks gave freedom to move clock edges
with respect to data to solve timing problems
– This is another form of “time borrowing”
• 60,000 local clock nodes, all were analyzed with SPICE
using minimum and maximum gate capacitance estimates
– Some local clocks had very high min/max delay variation
tolerances (up to 280 ps)
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Power Consumption 21264
• 72 W total (600 Mhz @ 2.2 V)
• Clock distribution power consumption: 46.8 W
–
–
–
–
Gclk 10.2 W
Major Clocks 24 W
Local unconditional clocks 7.6 W
Local conditional clocks 15.6
• Clocking accounted for 65% of the total power in the
21264!
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The IA-64 (Gen 1)
• IA-64 ISA is successor to the Pentium 4, which was the
successor to the Pentium 3/2/1.
– 64-bit architecture, all registers 64-bits wide
– 128 General Registers, 128 Floating Point Registers
– G0-G31 are global registers, G32-G127 are part of the “Register
Stack” where a dynamic number of them can be allocated as part
of procedure call/return and be visible to only that procedure
(similar to Sparc register windows).
– Superscalar, maximum issue of 6 instructions per clock
– Supports both speculative branching and speculative loading
• Itanium is the first implementation of the IA-64 ISA.
– Executes x86 code (IA-32) with a separate execution engine.
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Technology
•
•
•
•
0.18 CMOS
25.4 million transistors
6 metal layers
Flip-chip with 1014 pads
Recall that the Alpha
had 21264 had 15.2
million transistors
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IA-64 Clock Distribution (Gen 1)
DSK – deskew buffers,
Distribution Network
RCD – Regional Clock
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Reference, Core clocks
• On chip PLL generated 2X reference clock which is then
divided by two to form a 50% duty cycle core clock
– External clock (system clock) is input to PLL
• Both 2X reference clock and core clock is distributed
across die via an H tree
Routed in M5/M6
Fully laterally
shielded with
Vss/VDD
Inductive reflections
minimized at branch
points by sizing wires
to match impedances
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Inductance Affects Delay
Delay in Clock distribution metal H-tree network affected by R,
C, and L.
For Ghz speed clocks in a metal distribution network, must
include L in delay calculations
Inductance adds extra delay in current return path
Inductive effects decreased clock buffer delays dues to faster
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transition rates.
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Regional Clock Distribution
• De-skew buffers (DSK), Regional Clock Drivers (RCD),
and Region Clock Grid (RGD)
• 30 clock regions serviced by regional clocks
• Regional Clock Grid implemented in M4, M5
– Floats over one or more functional units
– Full lateral shielding via Vss/Vdd
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Alpha vs IA64 Approach
• Alpha CPU Major Clock = IA 64 Regional clocks
– Alpha did not attempt to deskew Major clocks with GCLK
– Alpha used local clocks generated from major clocks and did timing
analysis, path delay matching between clocks and data to solve timing
problems
• This does NOT account for delays due to on die process variations
– At Ghz clock speeds, skew due to on die process variations can cause
timing failures
• IA64 used an ‘active’ distributed deskewing approach for GCLK
and Regional Clocks
– Wanted to avoid the detailed delay matching, timing analysis required in the
Alpha design after complete implementation because of impact on design
schedule
– Account for delay due to on die process variations
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Think of reference clock as the ‘golden’ clock
Feedback clock!!!
Delay circuit used to control edge alignment of Global clock
with Regional Clock.
In general, this is a form of a Digital Delay Locked Loop
(DLL). Any form of PLL/DLL must have feedback for
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correction!
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Decoupling caps
Regional clock
can be gated
Shifting a ‘1’ from one end decreases delay, shifting a ‘0’ from opposite end
increases delay (this is a variable delay line).
Delay range was 170 ps in 8.5 ps steps. Phase adjustments made every 16
clock cycles. Could also be adjusted manually via test access port (TAP)
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Controller for Deskew Buffer Register
Deskew Register adjusted every 16 clock cycles of Reference
Clock.
The Deskew buffer is just a simple form of a Delay Locked
Loop (DLL).
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Why a Reference Clock?
• The goal of the DSK was to deskew the global (core) clock
with respect to the regional clocks
– Reference clock was 2X core clock
– Regional clocks were simply a delayed version of the global clock
– Reference clock was not deskewed but smaller distribution region and
more balanced routing gave less skew in reference clock.
• Not possible to maintain a balance routing network and load
matching for core clock over such a large design with
multiple design teams since the core clock was driving logic
– However, it was possible to design balanced routing network and
have load matching for the reference clock since all it drove were the
DSK’s and global clock design team solely responsible for reference
clock design
– Feedback clocks from the regional clock distribution were then used
to deskew regional clocks with respect to reference clock.
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Skew Elements
• Total skew of design based on residual skew in reference
clock, uncertainty of phase detector in DSK, and
mismatches of feedback clocks
– Reference clock did not have as large a distribution region as the
core clock, and loads were better matched, so had tighter skew
than would have been possible with global clock
– Feedback clock routes were kept short with respect to DSKs
– Phase detector uncertainty kept small via symmetric layout
techniques and by allowing a long time for phase comparison
• Achieved maximum skew was 28 ps (2.8% of a 1 Ghz
clock period).
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Measured skew via Laser voltage probing
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Local Clocks
• Local clocks generated from Regional Clocks and provided
clocks needed by domino logic
• Full timing analysis performed on local clocks
• Local clocks responsibility of functional block design
teams
• Global and regional clock responsibility of global clock
design team
Delay added for
time borrowing
or to account for
skew in local
clock
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Hold Time Analysis (another look)
TdI includes delay through
combinational logic plus
hold time on G2
This was called ‘race
analysis’ in Alpha notes
Min(Td)  max (Skew)
If shortest path from G1 to G2 is less than max Skew, than
incorrect value may get clocked into G2 when clock edge
arrives at G2.
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Four different cases for Max(skew)
LCB = local clock buffer.
Common reference means in same DSK cluster
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IA-64 Generations 2,3 CPU and CLK
• This lecture uses two papers that discuss the clock and CPU design of the
second and third generations of the IA-64
– Anderson, F. E., Wells, J. S., Berta, E. Z, “The Core Clock System on the
Next Generation Itanium Processor", ISSCC 2002, pp 453-456.
– Tam, S., Desai, U. Limaye, R., “Clock Generation and Distribution for the
Third Generation Itanium Processor ", 2003 Symposium n VLSI Circuits, pp
9-12.
– Stinson, J., Rusu, S., “A 1.5GHz Third Generation Itanium Processor”,
ISSCC 2003, paper 14.4.
– The implementation of the Itanium 2 microprocessor
Naffziger, S.D.; Colon-Bonet, G.; Fischer, T.; Riedlinger, R.; Sullivan, T.J.;
Grutkowski, T.;
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of , Volume: 37 Issue: 11 , Nov. 2002
Page(s): 1448 -1460
• All notes in this lecture are from these four papers.
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Clock Comparison of three generations of IA-64
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Comments
• Active de-skewing used in 1st generation jettisoned in 2nd
generation
– 2nd generation just used a balanced H-tree
– Difficult to route this type of structure - all clock routing was
reserved prior to block layout
– Differential clocks used for 2nd level clock distribution – reduced
jitter
– Non-active de-skew easier to test, and more deterministic behavior
– Intentional clock skewing for time borrowing easier
• 3rd generation uses programmable fuses for skewing
– allows skew adjustment after fabrication
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2nd Generation Clock distribution
differential
clocks
Gated clocks
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2nd Generation Clock Shielding
CLK+
CLK-
This level
reduces
inductive
effects.
Locates gnd
current
return close
to clock
lines.
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3rd Generation Distribution
Copper interconnect used, extra performance headroom
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Fuse-Based De-skewing
69 fuses
controlling 23
clock zones.
Delay increments
in 30.5 ps over
220 ps range.
SLCB = second level clock buffer
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Exhaustive search
for best fuse
settings not
possible, use a
generic search
algorithm with
statistical history
to help; done
during production
sort.
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Results of Skew Adjustment
Made a big
difference
here. Skew
reduced from
60ps to 24
ps.
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90 nm IA Microprocessor (2003)
Global clock distribution scaled up to 6 GHz
Used a clock distributed by H-tree, but shorted clock nodes
at about every third level in order to reduce the skew. No
active de-skew or fused-based de-skew.
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90 nm IA Microprocessor (2003) (cont)
Skew attenuation nodes are
shorted
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90 nm, Dual-Core Itanium (2005)
Up to 2.5 GHz, used regionbased, active de-skew
2nd-level clock buffer
drives 200 CVDs (clock vernier
devices)
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active de-skew
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90 nm, Dual-Core Itanium (2005) (cont)
Each 2nd- level clock buffer can dynamically adjust its delay by
up to 128 ps with 1 ps resolution
Each clock vernier device (CVD) gave an additional 70 ps of
skew adjustment
delay at each
clocking level and
power
consumption – note
the number of end
points! Post gater
delay matching
handled by
designers
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Xeon Dual-core (2006/65 nm) 3.4 GHz (Tulsa) –
two different clock systems
–Core clocks (clocks for processor cores) uses same core clock scheme as used
in Xeon Single Core (2003,/90 nm). This clock scheme was designed to scale up
to 6 GHz, and used a H-tree distributed clock with shorted nodes that had
produced less than 10 ps skew. No active de-skew or fuse-based de-skew.
–Un-core clock (everything outside the core) – Cache, bus logic, etc. Large area
prevented use of gridded clock (power restriction), used a clock tree (9 vertical, 2
horizontal) with fuse-based deskew at root of each vertical spine. Achieved less
than 11 ps skew.
Top measured frequency: 3.4 GHz
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Dual Core die photograph
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Clock Domains
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Clock Generator Arch.
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Clock Distribution
Fused-based
deskew
buffers
located at the
root of the
vertical
MCLK
spines
Zclk is the IO clock
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Clock Hierarchy
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Core to Un-Core deskew
Core Clock
Un-core clock
different VCCs
– Core 1.25 V,
uncore – 1.10 V
Core and un-core
clocks are
aligned, this just
de-skews the data
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IO Bus to un-core clock
domain
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IO-bus and Uncore clock at 8 to
N (N is integer
multiple of 200
MHz)
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Global Skew
Skew <
10 ps
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Power
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Papers
–Gronowski, Paul E., et.al., “High Performance Microprocessor Design”, IEEE Journal of Solid-State
Circuits, Vol. 33, No. 5, May 1998, pp. 676-686
–Bailey, Daniel W. and Bradley J. Benschneider, “Clocking Design and Analysis for a 600-Mhz Alpha
Microprocessor”, IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, Vol. 33, No. 11, November 1998, pp. 1627-1633
–Tam, S. et.al, "Clock Generation and distribution for the First IA-64 microprocessor", IEEE Journal of
Solid State Circuits, Vol 35, Issue 11, Nov 2000.
– Rusu, S. and Singer G, "The first IA-64 microprocessor ", IEEE Journal of Solid State Circuits, Vol 35,
Issue 11, Nov 2000.
–Anderson, F. E., Wells, J. S., Berta, E. Z, “The Core Clock System on the Next Generation Itanium
Processor", ISSCC 2002, pp 453-456.
– Tam, S., Desai, U. Limaye, R., “Clock Generation and Distribution for the Third Generation Itanium
Processor ", 2003 Symposium n VLSI Circuits, pp 9-12.
–Stinson, J., Rusu, S., “A 1.5GHz Third Generation Itanium Processor”, ISSCC 2003, paper 14.4.
–The implementation of the Itanium 2 microprocessor
Naffziger, S.D.; Colon-Bonet, G.; Fischer, T.; Riedlinger, R.; Sullivan, T.J.; Grutkowski, T.;
Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of , Volume: 37 Issue: 11 , Nov. 2002
Page(s): 1448 -1460
–A 90-nm variable frequency clock system for a power-managed itanium architecture processor, Fischer, T.;
Desai, J.; Doyle, B.; Naffziger, S.; Patella, B.; Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of Volume 41, Issue 1,
Jan. 2006 Page(s):218 – 228 Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/JSSC.2005.859879
–Clock distribution on a dual-core, multi-threaded Itanium/sup /spl reg//-family processor, Mahoney, P.;
Fetzer, E.; Doyle, B.; Naffziger, S.; Solid-State Circuits Conference, 2005. Digest of Technical Papers.
ISSCC. 2005 IEEE International 6-10 Feb. 2005 Page(s):292 - 599 Vol. 1 Digital Object Identifier
10.1109/ISSCC.2005.1493984
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Papers (cont)
–Scalable sub-10ps skew global clock distribution for a 90nm multi-GHz IA microprocessor Bindal, N.;
Kelly, T.; Velastegui, N.; Wong, K.L.; Solid-State Circuits Conference, 2003. Digest of Technical Papers.
ISSCC. 2003 IEEE International 2003 Page(s):346 - 498 vol.1 Digital Object Identifier
10.1109/ISSCC.2003.1234329
–A 65-nm Dual-Core Multithreaded Xeon® Processor With 16-MB L3 Cache Rusu, S.; Tam, S.; Muljono,
H.; Ayers, D.; Chang, J.; Cherkauer, B.; Stinson, J.; Benoit, J.; Varada, R.; Leung, J.; Limaye, R. D.; Vora,
S.; Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of Volume 42, Issue 1, Jan. 2007 Page(s):17 – 25 Digital Object
Identifier 10.1109/JSSC.2006.885041
–Clock Generation and Distribution of a Dual-Core Xeon Processor with 16MB L3 Cache Tam, S.; Leung,
J.; Limaye, R.; Choy, S.; Vora, S.; Adachi, M.; Solid-State Circuits, 2006 IEEE International Conference
Digest of Technical Papers Feb. 6-9, 2006 Page(s):1512 - 1521
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