History
For years Stanford University's VLSI Research Group collected and maintained a unique spreadsheet of commercial microprocessor characteristics. Over the years these data points were useful in a variety of research talks and publications. Unfortunately, the lack of a central repository for this database made it difficult to both share the data with everyone, and enhance it with outside contributions... until now. Welcome to
CPUDB.
What's the big deal?
There are certainly a number of existing useful online resources for microprocessor information. To name a few,
-
Intel
has detailed specifications for many products,
-
SPEC
has measured performance characteristics for many processors,
-
CPUWorld
contains diephotos, specifications, and benchmarks
-
Wikipedia
is a great source of architecture/specification information.
CPUDB
seeks to unify all of this information in a research-friendly, community-reviewed database. Additionally, it contains process technology information for each microprocessor, allowing for technology normalization across designs.
-
Visualize
interesting trends
-
Browse
processor data online
-
Download
the entire database in convenient CSV files and begin your own analysis
As with any large set of data, there are a number of holes (and possibly a few erroneous entries). We encourage anyone to contribute modifications to the database, or even to suggest new data fields they would find useful.
The Paper
Database Authors
This site was created by the following people.
-
Andrew Danowitz
-
Kyle Kelley
-
James Mao
-
John P. Stevenson
-
Mark Horowitz
-
Omid Azizi
-
John S. Brunhaver II
-
Ron Ho
-
Stephen Richardson
-
Ofer Shacham
-
Alex Solomatnikov
Database Acknowledgments
A special thanks to the following contributors:
-
Chris Batten
-
Ron Ho
-
Francois Labonte
-
Craig Teegarden