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Clock cycle Instr. No.
|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | IF | ID | EX | MEM | WB | ||
2 | IF | ID | EX | MEM | WB | ||
3 | IF | ID | EX | MEM | WB | ||
4 | IF | ID | EX | MEM | |||
5 | IF | ID | EX | ||||
(IF = Instruction Fetch, ID = Instruction Decode, EX = Execute, MEM = Memory access, WB = Register write back).
In the fourth clock cycle (the green column), the earliest instruction is in MEM stage, and the latest instruction has not yet entered the pipeline. |
In computer engineering, instruction pipelining is a technique for implementing instruction-level parallelism within a single processor. Pipelining attempts to keep every part of the processor busy with some instruction by dividing incoming instructions into a series of sequential steps (the eponymous "pipeline") performed by different processor units with different parts of instructions processed in parallel.