Reality Signal Processor
The Reality Signal Processor, or RSP, is the portion of the RCP responsible for matrix math, lighting calculations, clipping, shading, and other highly parallel graphics tasks as well as audio processing.
RSP has two different banks of onboard dedicated memories: IMEM (4KB) for instructions, and DMEM (4KB) for data. It has no external memory buses but has a DMA engine capable to copy code/data from/into DMEM/IMEM and the main RDRAM. The DMA engine can be driven by either the main CPU or the RSP itself.
The code running on the RSP is usually called "microcode", but it's a standard MIPS program, obviously containing the dedicated COP2 instructions to drive the VU. The RSP can be programmed in custom microcode to handle specific tasks, though most commercial games leveraged one of several stock microcodes made available by Nintendo at the time.
Specs
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CPU Type | Cut down version of the MIPS4000 CPU |
Clock Speed | 62.5mhz |
Instruction Size | 32bit (1 Word) |
Duel Instruction | Yes (one scaler and one vector opcode at once) |
Pipeline Stages | 5 stage pipeline for both the Scaler and Vector Pipelines
IF, RD and WB stages are shared between the two pipelines |
IMEM Data Path | 64bit (This allows a duel instruction to happen) This can only be double word aligned for reads |
Scaler Register Size | 32 entries of 32bit in size (Word Writable) |
Vector Register Size | 32 entries of 128bit is size (8bit to 128bit Mask Writable File) |
DMEM Scaler Data Path | Up to 32bit Loads and Stores |
DMEM Vector Data Path | Up to 128bit Loads and Stores |
Scaler ALU Size | 32bit in side only |
Vector ALU Size | 8x 16bit vector ALU pipelines (48bit Final Accumulator) |
RSP CPU core
The RSP CPU core is made by a stripped-down MIPS 32-bit core (without a few more advanced opcodes) referred to as Scalar Unit (SU), composed with a coprocessor (configured as COP2) that can perform SIMD operations on a separate set of vector registers, referred to as Vector Unit (VU).
RSP interface
The RSP interface is made of several memory-mapped registers and memory areas that allows the VR4300 to control the RSP. VR4300 is able to read and write to the internal IMEM/DMEM memory of the RSP to be able to upload the microcode to be run and fetch the results if required.