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SuperH

The SuperH (or SH) is a microprocessor architecture. The SuperH core is RISC based and found in a large number of embedded systems.

The SuperH family was first developed by Hitachi as the successor to the H8 Family and was outsourced to the newly-formed SuperH Inc., owned by Hitachi and ST Microelectronics. SuperH Inc now sells the designs of the CPU cores.

The SH-5 design added a SIMD Instuction Set called SHmedia and also supports the SHcompact instruction set, equivalent to the user-mode parts of the SH-4 instruction set. This is similar to the Thumb Instruction Set of ARM.

The older designs are now supported and sold by Renesas.

The family includes:

  • SH-1 – 32-bit with maximum of 20MHz (As used on Sega Saturn to control the CD-drive and to check the Copy Protection on the game's CD)
  • SH-2 – 32-bit with up to 28.7MHz (As used in the Sega Saturn)
  • SH-3 – 32-bit with up to 200MHz. This spring introduced a MMU to the SH Family (As used in many Windows CE devices)
  • SH-4 – 32-bit dual-issue core with a 128-bit vector FPU (As used in the Dreamcast and on some Sega Arcade Machines such as the Naomi and Naomi 2)
  • SH-5 – 64-bit core with a 128-bit vector FPU (64 32-bit registers) and an integer unit which includes the SIMD support and 63 64-bit registers. (The 64th register is hard-wired to zero.)

Examples include ST Microelectronics's ST40 or Hitachi's SH-4.

Distinctions

  • Low price
  • Low power consumption

External links

Linux for SuperH

NetBSD on SuperH








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