Difference between revisions of "Motorola MC68030"
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The '''Motorola MC68030''' is a 32-[[bit]] [[microprocessor]] in the [[Motorola M68000 Family]], the successor to the [[Motorola MC68020|68020]]. Later members include the [[Motorola MC68040|68040]] and [[Motorola MC68060|68060]]. | The '''Motorola MC68030''' is a 32-[[bit]] [[microprocessor]] in the [[Motorola M68000 Family]], the successor to the [[Motorola MC68020|68020]]. Later members include the [[Motorola MC68040|68040]] and [[Motorola MC68060|68060]]. | ||
− | + | The internal [[architecture]] was similar to the 68020; performance was increased in part by the increased use of [[cache|caching]]; the MC68030 included an additional separate 256-byte cache for data. | |
− | It was the first family member to include [[memory management]] on the main chip. It | + | It was the first family member to include [[memory management]] on the main chip. It did not include [[floating point]]; a separate floating point chip had to be used if [[hardware]] floating point was desired. |
It was used in a number of [[Macintosh]], [[Amiga]] and later [[Atari]] [[personal computer]]s, and also [[workstation]]s from [[NeXT Computer, Inc|NeXT]]. | It was used in a number of [[Macintosh]], [[Amiga]] and later [[Atari]] [[personal computer]]s, and also [[workstation]]s from [[NeXT Computer, Inc|NeXT]]. | ||
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− | [[Category:Microprocessors]] | + | [[Category: Microprocessors]] |
Revision as of 11:45, 1 November 2018
MC68030 | |
Family: | Motorola M68000 Family |
---|---|
Architecture: | 32-bit |
Manufacturer: | Motorola |
Year Introduced: | 1987 |
Address bus: | 32-bit |
Data bus: | 32-bit |
Number of registers: | 15 general 32-bit registers (8 data, 7 address) |
Cache: | 256 byte icache+dcache |
Clock Speed: | 16, 20, 25, 33, 40, 50 MHz |
The Motorola MC68030 is a 32-bit microprocessor in the Motorola M68000 Family, the successor to the 68020. Later members include the 68040 and 68060.
The internal architecture was similar to the 68020; performance was increased in part by the increased use of caching; the MC68030 included an additional separate 256-byte cache for data.
It was the first family member to include memory management on the main chip. It did not include floating point; a separate floating point chip had to be used if hardware floating point was desired.
It was used in a number of Macintosh, Amiga and later Atari personal computers, and also workstations from NeXT.
Downgraded versions which omitted the memory management were produced.