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+\title{Opgaver til Microprocessors 2}
+\date{2021-03-24}
+
+\section{Problem 4.1}
+
+\emph{In Fig. 4-6, the B bus register is encoded in a 4-bit field, but the C bus is represented
+as a bit map. Why?}
+
+It is often wanted to save the result from the ALU in multiple destination registers.
+Therefore one cannot take the shortcut with a 4-bit field, as that would only allow one save at the time.
+
+One cannot present 1 and 2 at the same time in 4-bit field, as that would activate register 3.
+
+\section{Problem 4.5}
+
+{\itshape
+ Suppose that in the example of Fig. 4-14(a) the statement
+ \begin{verbatim}
+ k = 5;
+ \end{verbatim}
+ is added after the if statement. What would the new assembly code be? Assume that
+ the compiler is an optimizing compiler.
+}
+
+Well k is set either way, so one can invert the if.
+
+\begin{verbatim}
+ ILOAD j
+ ILOAD k
+ IADD
+ BIPUSH 3
+ IF_ICMPEQ L1
+ ILOAD j
+ BIPUSH 1
+ ISUB
+ ISTORE j
+ L1: BIPUSH 5
+ ISTORE k
+\end{verbatim}
+
+\section{Problem 4.9}
+
+{\itshape
+ How long does a 2.5-GHz Mic-1 take to execute the Java statement
+ \begin{verbatim}
+ i = j + k
+ \end{verbatim}
+ Give your answer in nanoseconds
+}
+
+First we "compile" the java statement :-).
+
+\begin{verbatim}
+ ILOAD j
+ ILOAD k
+ IADD
+ ISTORE i
+\end{verbatim}
+
+Then we can add how many microinstructions each takes (\textbf{bold} number) multiplied with how many times it is used.
+
+\begin{equation}
+ \underbrace{\mathbf 1 \cdot 4}_{MAIN} + \underbrace{\mathbf 5 \cdot 2}_{ILOAD} + \underbrace{\mathbf 3}_{IADD} + \underbrace{\mathbf 6 \cdot 2}_{ISTORE} = 29
+\end{equation}
+
+Then we can multiply with the nanoseconds a single instruction takes
+\begin{equation}
+ \frac 1 {2.5 \cdot 10^9} \cdot 29 = 11.6 \cdot 10^{-9}\,,
+\end{equation}
+which is 11.6 Nanoseconds.
+