Architecture with non-sequential dynamic execution scheduling
In
microprocessor
design, the main idea behind an
architecture with non-sequential dynamic
execution scheduling
(ANDES) is to preorder processor instructions by their readiness (not necessarily
identic to the program order). It means that the instructions are topologically
sorted.
Another features include speculative conditional branches and non-blocking Load/Store.
Originally, ANDES was developed for the supercomputers (HP-PA 8000, MIPS R10000, IBM Power 4).
See also: scheduling