The CPU - Faculty Website Index Valencia College

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Transcript The CPU - Faculty Website Index Valencia College

Chapter 1
How Computers
Work
You Will Learn…
• That a computer requires both hardware and
•
•
software to work
About the many different hardware
components inside and connected to a
computer
How the CPU works and how it communicates
with other devices
Hardware Needs Software
to Work
• Hardware

Physical components of the computer (monitor,
keyboard, memory chips, hard drive)
• Software

Set of instructions that directs hardware to
accomplish a task
Hardware Needs Software
to Work
Functions of the Microcomputer
Binary Number System
• Technology of storing and reading only two
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•
values: on and off
Bits and bytes
Originated in the 1940s by John Atanasoff
Binary Number System
Binary Number System
PC Hardware Components
• Input/output devices: outside computer case
• Processing and storage components: inside the
•
case
Elements required by hardware devices to
operate:

Method for CPU to communicate with it
 Software to instruct and control it
 Electricity to power it
Hardware Used for
Input and Output
• Connects to computer case by ports
• Most popular input devices:

Keyboard
 Mouse
• Most popular output devices:

Monitor
 Printer
Ports
Input Devices
Output Devices
Hardware Inside the Case
• Motherboard (contains CPU, memory, etc.)
• Floppy drive, hard drive, and CD-ROM drive
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(permanent storage)
Power supply with cords supplying electricity
to all devices inside the case
continued…
Hardware Inside the Case
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Circuit boards (used by CPU to communicate with
devices inside/outside the case)

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Contain microchips, which are most often manufactured
using CMOS (complementary metal-oxide semiconductor)
technology
Cables that connect devices to circuit boards and the
motherboard
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Data cables
Power cables (or power cords)
Peripheral Devices
• Communicate with CPU but are not located
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directly on the motherboard
Some are linked by expansion cards in
expansion slots on the motherboard
The Motherboard
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Largest, most important circuit board in the computer
Contains the CPU, with which all devices must
communicate:

Installed directly on the motherboard
 Linked by a cable connected to a port on the motherboard
 Indirectly linked by expansion cards
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Also called the main board or system board
The Motherboard
Ports on a Motherboard
Major Components on All
Motherboards
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For processing:

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
CPU
Chip set

RAM
Cache memory
Electrical system:

Power supply
connections
For communication with
other devices:
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
For temporary storage:
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Traces
Expansion slots
System clock
Programming and setup
data:
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Flash ROM
CMOS setup chip
The CPU
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Most important chip
(the microprocessor)
Performs most of actual
data processing
The Chip Set
• Controls flow of data and instructions to and
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from the CPU
Provides careful timing of activities
The Chip Set
CPU and Chip Set Manufacturers
• IBM-compatible PCs
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
Intel Corporation
AMD
VIA
SiS
Cyrix
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Motorola Corporation
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• Macintosh (Apple Computer, Inc.)
Storage Devices
• Temporary (primary storage, or memory)

Temporarily holds data and instructions while
processing them
 Faster to access than permanent storage
• Permanent (secondary storage)

Data and instructions must be copied into primary
storage (RAM) for processing
Primary and Secondary Storage
Primary Storage Devices
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Memory, or RAM, located on motherboard and other
circuit boards
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Volatile versus nonvolatile (or ROM) memory
Common types of boards that hold memory chips
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SIMMs (single inline memory modules)
DIMMs (dual inline memory modules)
RIMMs (memory modules manufactured by Rambus, Inc.)
RAM Chips
Types of RAM Modules
Secondary Storage Devices
• Hard disks
• Floppy disks
• Zip drives
• CD-ROMs
• DVDs
Hard Drive
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Uses EIDE (Enhanced
Integrated Drive
Electronics) technology
Motherboard can
accommodate up to four
IDE devices on one system
IDE provides two
connectors on a
motherboard for two data
cables
Motherboard with Connectors
A Typical System
Hard Drive’s Power Supply
Floppy Drive Cable
Floppy Drive Connection
CD-ROM Drive
Motherboard Components Used for
Communication Among Devices
• The bus

System of pathways used for communication and
the protocol and methods used for transmission
 Includes a data bus, address bus, and control bus
Bus Lines
Data Bus
System Clock
• Synchronizes activity on the motherboard
• Sends continuous pulses over the bus that are
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used by different components to control the
pace of activity
Frequency of activity is measured in MHz,
or 1 million cycles per second
System Clock
Bus Lines
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Lines of a bus, including data, instruction, and power
lines, often extend to the expansion slots
Types of expansion slots

PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect)
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AGP (Accelerated Graphics Port)
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For high-speed input/output devices)
For a video card
ISA (Industry Standard Architecture)
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Used by older and/or slower devices)
Bus Lines
Types of Expansion Slots
Interface (Expansion) Cards
• Enable CPU to connect to external device or to
a network
Interface (Expansion) Cards
Full View of a Video Card
The Electrical System
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Power supply
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Most important component of
computer’s electrical system
Converts/reduces electricity to
voltage the computer can
handle
Runs a fan directly from
electrical output voltage to
cool inside of computer case
Electrical System
Electrical System
Instructions and Data Stored on the
Motherboard
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ROM BIOS
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Holds software needed to start up PC and begin loading an OS
Most are flash ROM
CMOS chip
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Stores setup (configuration) information
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
Setup information can also be set by means of jumpers and DIP (dual
inline package) switches
Powered by a battery on motherboard when power is off
ROM BIOS Chip
ROM BIOS Chip
CMOS Chip
Using Jumpers
DIP Switches
How a CPU Works and Communicates
with Other Devices
• Responsible for most processing
• Depends on chip set, system clock, and buses
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to move data to and from I/O devices, memory,
and secondary storage
Only two states: on and off
Components of a CPU
• Input/output (I/O) unit

Manages data/instructions entering/leaving CPU
• One or more arithmetic logic units (ALU)
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Does all comparisons and calculations
• Control unit
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Manages all activities inside CPU itself
Components of a CPU
How the CPU Works
• Registers hold data and instructions while it
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•
processes them
Memory cache holds data and instructions just
before they are processed
Internal bus runs at different speed than
external bus
How the CPU Uses Memory
• CPU accesses memory by way of the data bus
How CPU and Devices Use System
Bus to Communicate
The Address Bus
The Control Bus
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System clock control line
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Provides timing for motherboard components
Interrupt request (IRQ) lines
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Used by devices to get CPU’s attention; assigned at startup
Read/write control lines
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How to use address on address bus (read or write operation)
I/O control lines

How to use address lines (memory addresses or I/O
addresses)
Interrupt Request (IRQ) Lines
I/O Control Lines
Understanding Binary
• With computers, everything is binary; every
•
process is a series of zeros and ones
Decimal and hexadecimal notations are two
shorthand ways of displaying binary numbers
Understanding Binary
• Hexadecimal notation (hex)

Shorthand way to display long binary numbers;
easier for humans to understand
 Built on multiples of sixteen
• ASCII (American Standard Code for
Information Interchange) standard

Has assigned an 8-bit code for letters, symbols, and
other characters
Computer Terminology
Chapter Summary
• An introduction to the inside of the computer
• Initial insight into how hardware components
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•
of a computer system work
How a CPU works and communicates with
other devices
Understanding binary