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The ARM Cortex-R is a family of 32-bit and 64-bit RISC ARM processor cores licensed by Arm Ltd.The cores are optimized for hard real-time and safety-critical applications. Cores in this family implement the ARM Real-time (R) profile, which is one of three architecture profiles, the other two being the Application (A) profile implemented by the Cortex-A family and the Microcontroller (M ...
Cortex-A15: Texas Instruments OMAP5, Samsung Exynos 5250, ST Ericsson NovaThor A9600, [20] Fujitsu, [21] Nvidia Tegra 4 Samsung/Google Nexus 10, Samsung Chromebook XE303 Cortex-A17: Rockchip: RK3288: RK3288 Asus Tinker Board, Boardcon EM3288 SBC [22] Cortex-A32: Cortex-A35: NXP i.MX8X, MediaTek MT6799, MT8516, Rockchip RK3308: Cortex-A53 ...
Cortex-R: ARMv7-R Cortex-R4: Real-time profile, Thumb / Thumb-2 / DSP / optional VFPv3 FPU, hardware multiply and optional divide instructions, optional parity & ECC for internal buses / cache / TCM, 8-stage pipeline dual-core running lockstep with fault logic 0–64 KB / 0–64 KB, 0–2 of 0–8 MB TCM, opt. MPU with 8/12 regions 1.67 DMIPS ...
ARM7, ARM Cortex-M, ARM Cortex-A (on Jailhouse hypervisor), Hitachi H8, Altera Nios2, Microchip dsPIC (including dsPIC30, dsPIC33, and PIC24), Microchip PIC32, ST Microelectronics ST10, Infineon C167, Infineon Tricore, Freescale PPC e200 (MPC 56xx) (including PPC e200 z0, z6, z7), Freescale S12XS, EnSilica eSi-RISC, AVR, Lattice Mico32, MSP430 ...
This page was last edited on 25 December 2022, at 13:03 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
For example, the ARM Cortex-A32 supports only AArch32, [163] the ARM Cortex-A34 supports only AArch64, [164] and the ARM Cortex-A72 supports both AArch64 and AArch32. [165] An ARMv9-A processor must support AArch64 at all Exception levels, and may support AArch32 at EL0.
Arm Holdings plc (formerly an acronym for Advanced RISC Machines and originally Acorn RISC Machine) is a British semiconductor and software design company based in Cambridge, England, whose primary business is the design of central processing unit (CPU) cores that implement the ARM architecture family of instruction sets.
This is a comparison of ARM instruction set architecture application processor cores designed by Arm Holdings (ARM Cortex-A) and 3rd parties. It does not include ARM Cortex-R, ARM Cortex-M, or legacy ARM cores.