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Table of Contents
18-447 Introduction to Computer Architecture, Spring 2019
Announcements
- I highly recommend that you review RTL Verilog at HDLBits before start of term.
- Lab sections will not meet the first week of school.
- TAs will be available during scheduled lab hours. It does not matter which lab section you sign up for. You are only required to be present for lab check-offs. The entire group must be present for check-off.
Quick Links
- Current semester: Spring 2019 Lecture Notes
- Preview lecture notes from the last completed semester
- Go to Canvas for announcements and handouts
- Go to Piazza for Q&A
Course Description
Computer architecture is the science and art of selecting and interconnecting hardware components to create a computer that meets functional, performance and cost goals. This course introduces the basic principles and hardware structures of a modern programmable computer. We will learn, for example, how to design the control and datapath for a pipelined RISC processor and how to design fast memory and storage systems. The principles presented in lecture are reinforced in the laboratory through design and simulation of a register transfer (RT) implementation of a RISC processor pipeline in Verilog.
Prerequisites: 18-240 and 15/18-213 and (18340 or 18341 or 18348 or 18349 or 18320)
Staff
- Instructors
- Teaching Assistants
- Nikolai Lenney
- Amolak Nagi
- Ford Seidel
- Nathan Serafin
- Sihao Yu
Contact and Office Hours
Please see Canvas.
Meetings
- Lecture: MW, 12:30PM to 02:20PM, WEH 5403
- Lab Section A: Tue, 10:30AM to 01:20PM, HH1305
- Lab Section B: Thu, 1:30PM to 04:20PM, HH1305
Note: It doesn't matter which section you sign up for. You can get checked off during either section period.
Textbooks
- Computer Organization and Design RISC-V Edition: The Hardware Software Interface, 1st Edition by Patterson and Hennessy, Morgan Kaufmann. (Required)
- Synthesis Lectures on Computer Architecture at Morgan and Claypool (free access from CMU subnet)
- Also useful, textbooks from 18-240 and 15/18-213
Miscellaneous Links
- Spring 2009 Lecture Notes (archived “classic” edition with computer arithmetic without parallel architecture)