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February 20, 2006

Tensilica Introduces Industry’s Lowest Power Embedded Controller Cores

New Diamond Standard Family Members Deliver Unbeatable Combination of High Performance at Low Power

SANTA CLARA, CA – February 20, 2006 –Tensilica, Inc. today introduced the Diamond Standard family of synthesizable processor cores, which includes two synthesizable microcontroller CPUs optimized for area, performance and power efficiency. Competing directly with the ARM7 and ARM9 families of controllers, Tensilica’s Diamond 108Mini and 212GP require significantly lower power and provide much higher performance, making them ideal for microcontroller and system controller slots. With a lower starting price point, lower average royalty rate, and a solid group of ASIC and foundry distribution partners, Tensilica expects to rapidly gain market share in the entry-level and medium-range controller segment.

“Our customers have requested power-efficient, off-the-shelf controllers based on the proven Xtensa architecture, and the Diamond Standard products are the result of the input we gathered from these customers,” stated Steve Roddy, Tensilica’s vice president of marketing. “We’re proud that these processors far outperform their ARM equivalent synthesizable cores.”

Based on Proven Xtensa ISA

The entire Diamond Standard family is based on Tensilica’s proven Xtensa processor architecture, which is poised to become the number two licensable processor core architecture in the market based on 2006 volume shipments. The Xtensa architecture is a post-RISC-style architecture with native 32-bit data types (operands and ALUs) for the baseline 80+ instructions. Compact 24-bit/16-bit instruction encodings and the ability to do modeless switching between them reduces power consumption and produces 25 to 50 percent higher code density than standard 32-bit architectures. Register windows for efficient procedure switches provide high performance with low power. The base Xtensa ISA also provides powerful branch instructions and complex bit manipulations.

The Diamond 108Mini

The Diamond 108Mini is an ultra-low power, cacheless RISC controller with a rich interrupt architecture, a small gate count and the ability to attach local memory instruction and data RAMs of varying sizes. With a maximum operating clock frequency of 350 MHz in a 130 nm “LV type” process the Diamond 108Mini delivers ARM9 performance with lower power than the ARM7.

 
ARM 7TDMI-S Diamond 108Mini ARM 968E-S
Max Frequency (0.13u G) worst case, optimized for speed
146 MHz 233-250 MHz 240 MHz
Dhrystone MIPS
131 300 264
Power - mW per MHz (0.13u G) under typical conditions
0.11 0.11 0.12-0.23
Area
0.32 mm2 0.46 mm2 0.59 mm2
# Interrupts
3 15 3
Timers
No Yes No
Direct interface ports/wires
No 32-bit input ports, 32-bit output ports No

(Note: ARM specifications taken from ARM’s public website.)

The Diamond 212GP

The Diamond 212GP is a flexible mid-range RISC controller that includes instruction and data caches, a 16-bit multiply-accumulator, DSP functions and zero-overhead loop support. The Diamond 212GP also includes a single-cycle latency local interface bus. This processor core provides 40 percent better performance and 30 percent lower power than an ARM9 processor.

 
  ARM 946E-S Diamond 212GP
Max Frequency (0.13u G) worst case, optimized for speed
210 MHz 230-250 MHz
Dhrystone MIPS
231 345
Power - mW per MHz (0.13u G) typical conditions
0.30 0.195
Area
1.96 mm2 0.70 mm2
Zero-overhead looping
No Yes
# Interrupts
3 15
Timers
No Yes
Direct interface power/wires
No 32-bit input ports, 32-bit output ports

Microcontroller-Style Direct Input Wires and Output Ports Simplify I/O

The Diamond 108Mini and Diamond 212GP provide designers with direct interface input ports and output wires for direct connections to other hardware blocks on the chip. These direct interface ports and wires provide a convenient and lower-power alternative compared to using bus-based, memory-mapped I/O interfaces. Thirty-two individually sampled input ports and 32 single-bit output wires provide device-driver programmers with a generous number of general-purpose I/O bits for hardware interface and system control. These I/O ports provide direct control between the Diamond processor and related peripherals. These wires and ports are similar in concept to GPIO pins on classic microcontrollers, and are unavailable on the ARM7 and ARM9 processors.

AMBA AHB Interface Available

All Tensilica Diamond Series cores are available with either the native high-performance Tensilica PIF processor interface, suitable for bridging to any on-chip bus (e.g. OCP, CoreConnect) or with an AMBA AHB-Lite interface. SOC designers therefore can choose any common on-chip bus and leverage existing infrastructure and peripheral component sets.

Pricing and Availability

Tensilica’s new Diamond Standard family of processors is available now either direct from Tensilica, or from a roster of ASIC and foundry partners also announced today. See separate news release, or go to www.tensilica.com for more information. Pricing starts at $75,000 for the Diamond 108Mini for a single-use license with 5 cent per core royalties.

About Tensilica

Tensilica offers the broadest line of controller, CPU and specialty DSP processors on the market today, in both an off-the-shelf format via the Diamond Standard Series cores and with full designer configurability with the Xtensa processor family. Tensilica’s low-power, benchmark proven processors have been designed into high-volume products at industry leaders in the digital consumer, networking and telecommunications markets. All Tensilica processor cores are complete with a matching software development tool environment, portfolio of system simulation models, and hardware implementation tool support. For more information on Tensilica's patented approach to the creation of application-specific building blocks for SOC design, visit www.tensilica.com.

# # #

Editors’ Notes:

  • Tensilica and Xtensa are registered trademarks belonging to Tensilica Inc. All other company and product names are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of their respective owners.
  • Tensilica’s announced licensees include Agilent, ALPS, AMCC (JNI Corporation), Astute Networks, Atheros, ATI, Avision, Bay Microsystems, Berkeley Wireless Research Center, Broadcom, Cisco Systems, Conexant Systems, Cypress, Crimson Microsystems, ETRI, FUJIFILM Microdevices, Fujitsu Ltd., Hudson Soft, Hughes Network Systems, Ikanos Communications, LG Electronics, Marvell, MediaWorks, NEC Laboratories America, NEC Corporation, NetEffect, Neterion, Nippon Telephone and Telegraph (NTT), NVIDIA, Olympus Optical Co. Ltd., sci-worx, Seiko Epson, Solid State Systems, Sony, STMicroelectronics, Stretch, TranSwitch Corporation, u-Nav Microelectronics, and Victor Company of Japan (JVC).
SOC book
RECOGNITION
Red herring top 100
Portable Design 2006 Editor's  Choice Award
Best Processor Cores of 2004
EDN's Hot 100 Products of 2006
QUOTABLE

“It is faster and easier to design complex SOCs using Xtensa configurable processors - especially when using the XPRES Compiler - than to hand-code complex SOC design elements in hardware using traditional RTL methods. Plus the Xtensa processors are programmable, so it will be valuable for future products and applications.”

- Katsuhiko Nishizawa, general manager of the IJP Design Department of the Imaging Products Operations Division of Seiko Epson Corporation.