CSE 240A -- Principles in Computer Architecture
Winter 2008
Instructor: Dean Tullsen
Announcements:
Final Exam, Thurs, March 20, 11:30-2:30. Peterson 103 (same room)
Final Exam review -- Tuesday, March 18, 6:30, CSE 1202 (come prepared with questions)
Normal office hours for Dean and JiaHua in effect during finals week.
Lecture
Slides
Homework
and Project Assignments
Basic Course Information:
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Instructor: Dean Tullsen
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CSE 3216
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tullsen at cs dot ucsd dot edu
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534-6181
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office hours: Tu 3, W 10, and by appt
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TA: JiaHua He
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j2he at cs dot ucsd dot edu
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office hours, M 2:30-4:30
- office hours location, CSE B240A
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Meeting times and place:
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Peterson 103
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lecture: Tu Th 11:00-12:20
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Course textbook
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Hennessy & Patterson, "Computer Architecture: A Quantitative Approach",
Fourth Edition, Morgan Kaufmann
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Other recommended reading
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Assignments will be of two types:
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traditional homeworks, e.g., problems from the book, typically with 1-week
notice.
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small projects, typically involving simulation and analysis tools
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The class mailing list will be used for announcements,
etc. All students will be held responsible for announcements and information
that go out over the class mailing list. Make sure you are on it. Go here
to subscribe to the list. If you need to send mail to the list, it is cse240a at cs.ucsd.edu.
Course Outline:
I. Introduction
II. Computer System Performance
III. Instruction Set Architecture
IV. Pipelining
V. Instruction-Level Parallelism
VI. The Memory/Cache Hierarchy
VII. Parallel Machines
Grading Information:
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The grade for 240 will be based on homeworks, projects, one midterm, and a final,
as follows (this is subject to change, but only with plenty of notice):
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homeworks and projects: 30%
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midterm: 25%
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final: 45%
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subjective influences like class participation will have an impact in the
margins.
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The final will be inclusive of all course material.
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Late assignments are not encouraged. Late assignments will receive partial
credit -- they may or may not be graded. We will make every effort to return
assignments to you in a timely manner -- limiting your ability to turn
things in late is, unfortunately, critical to that goal.
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You have the right of appeal for grading on all tests; however, an appeal
(except for scoring errors) covers the entire test, and may result in an
unfavorable judgment on another problem (but not typically). You have one week from the time
the midterms are returned to make appeals, including addition errors on
your score. Check it over carefully when you get it.
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There is no appeal on homeworks, except for addition errors. No single
problem will have a significant impact on your grade.
Integrity:
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I hope cheating isn't an issue for a graduate class. If it is, severe consequences
will result.