Featured Articles

Cooler Master HAF XM reviewed

Cooler Master HAF XM reviewed

Cooler Master introduced the new HAF XM on April 24. The company's HAF series is instantly recognizable, although the XM moniker…

More...
Cedar Trail to last to Q1 2013

Cedar Trail to last to Q1 2013

Intel Cedar Trail, in both the desktop and notebook variants, will most likely remain unchanged until the end of Q1 2013.…

More...
50 percent of next-gen netbooks will be fanless

50 percent of next-gen netbooks will be fanless

Intel has at least two different design kits for different netbook form factors that should revive this category in 2012. Well,…

More...
Galaxy S III preorders hit 9 million

Galaxy S III preorders hit 9 million

Worldwide preorders for Samsung’s new flagship phone have reportedly hit 9 million. According to Korean media, more than 100 carriers are…

More...
EVGA GTX 690 4GB previewed

EVGA GTX 690 4GB previewed

Geforce GTX 690 launched on May 3, but it wasn’t until recently that first batches of cards were shipped to stores.…

More...
Frontpage Slideshow | Copyright © 2006-2010 orks, a business unit of Nuevvo Webware Ltd.
Thursday, 09 February 2012 13:24

Haswell will have transactional memory

Written by Nick Farrell

intel logo new

Will remember how much you paid for it

Chipzilla has announced that when its new Haswell chip comes out next year it will have support for something called transactional memory.

Transactional memory makes the creation of reliable multithreaded programs easier by using a system where complex operations can be performed at the same time and in isolation from each other. The system has been seen in database management but making a chip work using it is new.

Intel calls it Transactional Synchronisation Extensions(TSX).  There is the Hardware Lock Elision (HLE) allows easy conversion of lock-based programs into transactional programs in a way that's backwards compatible with current processors. Then there is the Restricted Transactional Memory (RTM) is a more complete transactional memory implementation.

It will then be possible to write programs and operating systems that will use transactions on Haswell, and hence achieve greater concurrency and have fewer threads waiting around for locks, but will still run correctly on current processors. In turn, this makes adoption of the feature much simpler and safer.


blog comments powered by Disqus

To be able to post comments please log-in with Disqus

Facebook activity

Latest Commented Articles

Recent Comments