资料来源 : Free On-Line Dictionary of Computing
RCA 1802
An extremely simple {microprocessor} fabricated in
{CMOS}, running at 6.4 MHz at 10V (very fast for 1974). It
could be suspended with the clock stopped. It was an 8-bit
processor, with 16-bit addressing. Simplicity was the primary
design goal, and in that sense it was one of the first {RISC}
chips. It had sixteen 16-bit {registers}, which could be
accessed as thirty-two 8-bit registers, and an {accumulator} D
used for arithmetic and memory access - memory to D, then D to
registers and vice versa, using one 16-bit register as an
address. This led to one person describing the 1802 as having
32 bytes of {RAM} and 65535 I/O ports. A 4-bit control
register P selected any one general register as the {program
counter}, while control registers X and N selected registers
for I/O Index and the operand for the current instruction.
All instructions were 8 bits - a 4-bit {op code} (total of 16
operations) and 4-bit {operand register} stored in N. There
was no real {conditional branching}, no {subroutine} support
and no actual {stack} but these could be implemented by clever
use of registers, e.g. changing P to another register allowed
jump to a subroutine. Similarly, on an interrupt P and X were
saved, then R1 and R2 were selected for P and X until an {RTI}
restored them.
The {RCA 1805} was an enhanced version.
The 1802 was used in the {COSMAC} (VIP?) {microcomputer} kit,
some video games from {RCA} and {Radio Shack}, and the
{ETI-660} computer. It was chosen for the Voyager, Viking and
Galileo space probes as it was also fabricated in {Silicon on
Sapphire}, giving radiation and static resistance, ideal for
space operation.
{More history (http://www.cosmacelf.com)}.
(2002-04-09)