SECTION I - CLASS DEFINITION
This class provides, within a computer or digital
data processing system, for subject matter represented
by a particular arrangement that includes at least one of the following
means: A) components of an individual complete
processor, which may be formed on a single integrated circuit (IC); B) components
of a complete digital data processing system; C) plural
processors; or D) plural digital data processing
systems; wherein the particular arrangement further includes
at least one of the following functions:
1) processing instruction data for specific processor architectures;
2) accessing or retrieving instruction data of a
fixed or variable length from a buffer or other memory and shifting
the instruction data to align it with a physical boundary of a buffer
or other memory;
3) locating and retrieving instruction data for processing;
4) determining via internal hardware, firmware
or software operations the meaning of operation codes, control bits, or
operands of instruction data;
5) dispatching instruction data for execution (e.g., designating
a register after resolving data conflicts);
6) dynamically testing instruction data and operands
to assess conflicts related to data or hardware-resource availability (e.g., identifying
data dependencies or utilization conflicts, attempting
to resolve such dependencies or conflicts, or both); and
7) dynamically controlling the execution, processing, or sequencing
of instruction data within a processor.
SECTION II - NOTES TO THE CLASS DEFINITION
| (1)
Note. Instruction data are defined in the glossary
for this class to be data representative of an operation and identifying
its operands, if any. |
| (2)
Note. Process and apparatus for processing instruction
data that are classified herein are predicated on a particular, identifiable architecture
of a computer or digital data processing system that directs the
nature of the processing. Multiple computer and process
coordinating (e.g., task management, task
control) is classified elsewhere. See SEE OR
SEARCH CLASS notes below. |
| (3)
Note. Register level transactions at the level of
the arithmetic logic unit (ALU-level) or
functional unit (FU-level) and logic
for realizing such transactions are often a part of instruction
processing, per se. General purpose, digital
logic circuits, however, are classified elsewhere.
See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. |
| (4)
Note. Exceptions, interrupts, and
traps classified herein recite the details of the internal operation
of the hardware or the microcode of the processor with only nominal
recitation of the stimulus resulting in the exception, interrupt
or trap. Process and apparatus for queuing or scheduling interrupts
or signals in a computer or digital data processing system are classified
elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below.
Process and apparatus directed to reliability and testing utilizing halts, interrupts, and
traps are also classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS
notes below. |
| (5)
Note. Virtual machine or virtual processor is classified
elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. |
| (6)
Note. Process and apparatus for dynamically aligning
instruction data are classified herein. Process and apparatus
for shifting memory spaces, such as, boundary
alignment related to memory addressing and page mapping are classified
elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. Compilers
performing static alignment are classified elsewhere.
See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. Process and apparatus
for aligning for data entry or compacting in cache memory typically
are classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes
below. |
| (7)
Note. Emulation for decoding instruction data for
execution is classified herein; however, emulation
of system component for compatibility is classified elsewhere.
See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. Emulation directed
to testing is also classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS
notes below. |
| (8)
Note. Process and apparatus for locating and retrieving
instruction data in direct support of an instruction pipeline are
classified herein; however, process and apparatus
for accessing and controlling memory at other higher levels (e.g., cache
memory, disk memory, and shared memory) are
classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. |
| (9)
Note. Process and apparatus nominally reciting addressing
schemes and address data generation may be classified herein; however, process
and apparatus for generalized address forming, addressing
operands, generating addresses in response to microinstructions, and
addressing in combination with particular memory systems are classified
elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. |
| (10)
Note. Process and apparatus for decoding instruction
data to determine their meaning for subsequent execution or decision
making are classified herein; however, generic decoding
circuits, methods, and programs are classified
elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. |
| (11)
Note. Process and apparatus for issuing or dispatching
of instruction data to hardware elements internal to a processor
for decoding or executing are classified herein; however, process
and apparatus for dispatching in the field of process control for
task management dealing with process scheduling, load balancing, etc., are
classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. |
| (12)
Note. Process and apparatus for dynamically controlling
the issuance or execution of instruction data based on analysis
of hardware-resource availability, hardware-resource
utilization, and data dependency are classified herein; however, processes and
apparatus for task resource management are classified elsewhere.
See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. Dependency checking
performed by a compiler is classified elsewhere. See SEE
OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. Process and apparatus for
enhancing the reliability and availability of functional units that include
determining a fault condition are classified elsewhere.
See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. |
| (13)
Note. Process and apparatus for dealing with resource
management problems within a stream of instruction data, generally
at the ALU/functional-unit level are classified herein; however, process
and apparatus for resource management in a manufacturing environment
are classified elsewhere. See the SEE OR SEARCH CLASS
notes below. |
| (14)
Note. Process and apparatus for reserving the use
of functional units at the instruction level of a computer or digital
data processing system are classified herein; however, processes
and apparatus for reserving seats for travel, entertainment, etc. are
classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. |
| (15)
Note. Process and apparatus utilizing hardware or
microcode for processing and executing instruction data are classified
herein; however, instruction processing being
performed by a compiler, by an interpreter, or by
an operating system is classified elsewhere. See SEE OR
SEARCH CLASS notes below. Process and apparatus for high-level
processing of input/output commands are classified elsewhere.
See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. Process and apparatus
for the sequencing common in computerized numerical controllers (CNC), industrial
controllers, computer driven machining, etc., is
classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS notes below. |
| (16)
Note. Hardwired sequencers are also often referred
to as sequential state machines in the art. They are appropriately
classified herein when they are performing control or sequencing
of instruction data within a processor. |
| (17)
Note. Process and apparatus for graphic command
processing are classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH
CLASS notes below. |
SECTION III - REFERENCES TO OTHER CLASSES
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
326, | Electronic Digital Logic Circuitry, appropriate subclasses for generic digital logic devices, circuitry, and
subcombinations thereof, wherein nonarithmetical operations
are performed upon discrete electrical signals representing a value normally
described by numerical digits, particularly
subclasses 37+ for programmable circuits such as Programmable
Logic Arrays (PLA) and subclasses 105+ for
decoding circuitry. |
340, | Communications: Electrical,
subclasses 1.1 through 16.1for controlling one or more devices to obtain a
plurality of results by transmission of a designated one of plural
distinctive control signals over a smaller number of communication
lines or channels, particularly subclasses 2.1-2.8
for path selection, subclass 2.81 for tree or
cascade selective communication, subclasses 3.1-3.9
for communication systems where status of a controlled device is communicated, subclasses
4.1-4.14 for synchronizing selective
communication systems, subclasses 9.1-9.17
for selective communication addressing, subclasses 12.1-12.55
for pulse responsive actuation, and subclasses 14.1-14.69
for selective decoder matrix. |
345, | Computer Graphics Processing and Selective Visual
Display Systems, particularly
subclasses 502+ for a computer graphic processor system which includes
plural graphics processors, subclass 522 for graphic command
processing |
370, | Multiplex Communications, appropriate subclasses for the simultaneous transmission
of two or more signals over a common medium, particularly
subclasses 254+ for network configuration determination, subclasses
351+ for path finding or routing including packet switching, circuit
switching, ATM switching, and subclasses 465+ for
adaptive communication protocol. |
377, | Electrical Pulse Counters, Pulse Dividers, or Shift
Registers: Circuits and Systems, various subclasses for generic circuits for pulse
counting. |
380, | Cryptography, appropriate subclasses for cryptographic apparatus
or process in general which includes electric signal modification. |
381, | Electrical Audio Signal Processing Systems and
Devices, various subclasses for wired one-way audio
systems, per se. |
700, | Data Processing: Generic Control Systems
or Specific Applications,
subclasses 1 through 89for generic data processing control systems and subclasses
90-306 for specific data processing application. |
701, | Data Processing: Vehicles, Navigation, and Relative
Location,
subclasses 1+ for vehicle control, guidance, operation, or
indication, subclasses 400-541 for navigation, and
subclasses 300+ for relative location determination. |
702, | Data Processing: Measuring, Calibrating
or Testing, appropriate subclasses for testing measuring or calibrating, particularly
subclass 186 for computer and peripheral benchmarking. |
703, | Data Processing: Structural Design, Modeling, Simulation, and
Emulation, appropriate subclasses. |
704, | Data Processing: Speech Signal Processing, Linguistics, Language
Translation, and Audio Compression/Decompression,
subclasses 1+ for linguistics; subclasses 200+ for
speech audio processing, subclasses 500 through 504 for
audio signal time or bandwidth compression or expansion. |
705, | Data Processing: Financial, Business
Practice, Management, or Cost/Price Determination, particularly
subclasses 5+ for reservation, check-in, and
booking for reserving space, subclasses 7.13 through
7.26 for scheduling and allocating resources for administrative
functions, and subclasses 64 through 79 for a cryptographically
protected EFT transaction. |
706, | Data Processing: Artificial Intelligence,
subclasses 1+ for fuzzy logic hardware; subclass 10
for plural processing intelligence systems, subclass 11
for artificial intelligence system having particular user interface; subclasses
12+ for machine learning system, subclass 14
for adaptive system; subclasses 15+ for neural
network; and subclasses 45+ for knowledge processing
system. |
707, | Data Processing: Database, Data
Mining, and File Management or Data Structures, particularly
subclasses 781 through 789for access control to a database or file in a
computer environment and subclasses 790 through 812 for database
design including data structures and data structure management and
subclasses 813 through 820 for garbage collection in database environments
and subclasses 821 through 831 for file management, file
systems and file directory structures. |
708, | Electrical Computers: Arithmetic Processing and
Calculating,
subclasses 1+ for electrical hybrid calculating computer, subclasses
100+ for electrical digital calculating computer, and subclasses
800+ for electrical analog calculating computer. |
709, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Multicomputer
Data Transferring, appropriate subclassesfor transferring data between plural, spatially
distributed computers or digital data processing systems. |
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Data Processing
Systems: Input/Output, appropriate subclasses for interconnecting or transferring
data among processors, memories, and peripherals for
of computers or digital data processing systems particularly
subclasses 260+ for interrupt processing. |
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclasses 1+ for addressing in combination with particular memory systems; particularly
subclass 2 for addressing extended or expanded memory; subclass
5 for addressing multiple memory modules; subclasses 101+ for
accessing and control of specific memory compositions; subclasses
118+ for cache memory; subclasses 147+ for
shared memory access and control; subclass 159 for memory
entry replacement strategies; subclass 201 for address
generation directed to slip control, misalignment, and
boundary alignment; subclass 209 for page address generation
processing; and subclass 212 for address generation by
varying bit-length or size; subclass 214 for operand
address generation; and subclass 215 for address formation
in response to a microinstruction; |
713, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Support,
subclasses 1 and 2 for computer initialization or configuration; subclass 100
for reconfiguration; subclasses 150-181 for multiple
computer communication protection by cryptography; subclass
187 for computer program modification detection by cryptography, subclass
188 for computer virus detection by cryptography; subclasses
300-340 for computer power control; and subclasses
400-601 for synchronization or clock control in a digital data
processing. |
714, | Error Detection/Correction and Fault
Detection /Recovery, particularly
subclass 707 for synchronization control using an error rate; subclass
731 for a reference timing function or a clock pulse generator
in a scan path testing system; subclass 744 for clock
or synchronization in digital logic testing using a test pattern generator; and
subclass 798 for error detection for synchronization control. |
715, | Data Processing: Presentation Processing
of Document, Operator Interface Processing, and Screen
Saver Display Processing, appropriate subclassesfor document presentation processing. |
716, | Computer-Aided Design and Analysis of
Circuits and Semiconductor Masks, appropriate subclasses. |
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation, and
Management, appropriate subclasses for a software development tool, particularly,
subclasses 140 through 161for compilers and compiler-related dependency checking. |
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Virtual
Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control, appropriate subclasses for task management or task control, particularly
subclass 106 for dependency based cooperative processing of multiple
programs working together to accomplish a larger task. |
726, | Information Security,
subclasses 1 through 36for information security in computers or digital processing
system. |
SECTION IV - GLOSSARY
BUS
A conductor used for transferring data, signals, or power.
COMPUTER
A machine that inputs data, processes data, stores
data, and outputs data.
DATA
Representation of information in a coded manner suitable
for communication, interpretation, or processing.
Address data-Data that represent or identify
a source or destination.
Instruction data-Data that represent an operation
and identify its operands, if any.
Status data-Data that represent conditions of
data, digital data processing systems, computers, peripherals, memory, etc.
User data-Data other than address data, instruction
data, or status data.
DATA PROCESSING
See PROCESSING, below.
DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING SYSTEM
An arrangement of processor(s) in combination
with either memory or peripherals, or both, performing
data processing.
ERROR
Manifestation of a fault as an undesired event that occurs
when actual behavior deviates from the behavior that is required
by initial specifications.
FAILURE
Manifestation of an error as a nonperformance of an expected
system service as required by the initial specifications.
FAULT
A flaw in a functional unit (hardware or software).
INFORMATION
Meaning that a human being assigns to data by means of the
conventions applied to that data.
MEMORY
A functional unit to which data can be stored and from which
data can be retrieved.
PERIPHERAL
A functional unit that transmits data to or receives
data from a computer to which it is coupled.
PROCESSING
Methods or apparatus performing systematic operations upon
data or information exemplified by functions such as data or information
transferring, merging, sorting, and computing (i.e., arithmetic
operations or logical operations).
| (1)
Note.In this class, the glossary term data
is used to modify processing in the term data processing; whereas
the term digital data processing system refers to a machine performing
data processing. |
| (2)
Note.In an effort to avoid redundant constructions, in
this class, where appropriate, the term address
data processing is used in place of address data data processing. |
PROCESSOR
A functional unit that interprets and executes instruction data.
RECOVERY
Responding to a fault in a system by either returning
a system to a previous level of correct operation, achieving
a degraded level of correct operation, or safely shutting
down the system.
SECURITY
Extent of protection for system hardware, software, or data
from maliciously caused destruction, unauthorized modification, or
unauthorized disclosure.
SUBCLASSES
1 | PROCESSING ARCHITECTURE: |
| This subclass is indented under the class definition. Subject matter comprising a particular arrangement of (a) elements
of an individual complete processor which may be formed on a single
integrated chip, (b) components of a complete
digital data processing system, (c) plural
processing elements, (d) plural processors, or (e) plural
digital data processing systems where processing is performed on
a generic instruction or process.
| (1)
Note. This subclass and its indents require more
than nominal recitation of the architecture of processing elements or
operations. |
| (2)
Note. Implementation of a generic instruction within
a particular instruction set is classified here. |
| (3)
Note. Architecture based instruction processing
including specific instruction implementation, such as, branching, store
multiple, etc. are classified elsewhere.
See SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS notes below. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
200+, | for architecture based instruction processing including
specific instruction implementation, such as, branching, store
multiple, etc. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
340, | Communications: Electrical,
subclasses 1.1 through 16.1for controlling one or more devices to obtain a plurality
of results by transmission of a designated one of plural distinctive control
signals over a smaller number of communication lines or channels, particularly
subclasses 2.1-2.8 for path selection, subclass
2.81 for tree or cascade selective communication, subclasses
3.1-3.9 for communication systems where
status of a controlled device is communicated, subclasses 4.1-4.14
for synchronizing selective communication systems, subclasses 9.1-9.17
for selective communication addressing, subclasses 14.1-14.69
for selective decoder matrix, and subclasses 12.1-12.55
for pulse responsive actuation. |
345, | Computer Graphics Processing and Selective Visual
Display Systems,
subclasses 502+ , for a computer graphic processor system
which includes plural graphics processors. |
370, | Multiplex Communications, for the simultaneous transmission of two or more signals
over a common medium where the transmitted data is generic to the
transmission activity, particularly
subclasses 351+ for time division multiplex (TDM) switching, subclasses
475 for asynchronous TDM communications including addressing, and
subclasses 498+ for time division bus transmission. |
700, | Data Processing: Generic Control Systems
or Specific Applications,
subclass 249 for plural processor robot control. |
708, | Electrical Computers: Arithmetic Processing
and Calculating,
subclasses 100+ and particularly subclasses 200+ for an
electric digital calculating computer which may utilize processor structure
similar to that contained herein. |
709, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Multicomputer
Data Transferring, appropriate subclassesfor data transfer between plural spatially distributed
computers or digital data processing systems. |
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Data Processing
Systems: Input/Output,
subclasses 100+ for particular intrasystem connecting (e.g., bus
transaction processing) not included in a particular processing
architecture, and subclasses 260+ for general
interrupt processing. |
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation, and
Management,
subclasses 149 and 150 for program code translating or compiling
for multiprocessor system. |
|
| |
2 | Vector processor: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 1. Subject matter including specificadaptation of the architecture
or structure which operates on one-dimensional data arrays.
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
10+, | for array processor architecture, in general. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
708, | Electrical Computers: Arithmetic Processing and
Calculating,
subclasses 100+ and particularly subclasses 200+ for an
electric digital calculating computer which may utilize processor structure
similar to that contained herein. |
|
| |
4 | Distributing of vector data to vector registers: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 2. Subject matter involving structure providing vector data
transfer to vector registers.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
709, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Multicomputer Data Transferring, appropriate subclassesfor data transfer between plural complete spatially
distributed computers or digital data processing systems. |
|
| |
8 | Sequential: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 7. Subject matter wherein a vector processing is performed
in program order. |
| |
9 | Concurrent: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 7. Subject matter wherein multiple vector instructions are
issued simultaneously. |
| |
10 | Array processor: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 1. Subject matter comprising four or more identical processing
elements (e.g., cells) joined in a two-dimensional or higher arrangement.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
708, | Electrical Computers: Arithmetic Processing and
Calculating,
subclasses 100+ and particularly subclasses 200+ for an
electric digital calculating computer which may utilize processor structure
similar to that contained herein. |
|
| |
11 | Array processor element interconnection: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 10. Subject matter including details of a structure which mutually
joins the identical processing elements.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Data Processing
Systems: Input/Output,
subclasses 100+ for particular intrasystem connecting (e.g., bus
transaction processing) not included in a particular array processing
architecture. |
|
| |
12 | Cube or hypercube: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 11. Subject matter wherein the identical processing elements
are joined in a 3-or - greater dimensional pattern. |
| |
13 | Partitioning: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 11. Subject matter which controls the structure joining the
processing elements by partitioning the array into groups of processing
elements.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Memory,
subclass 129 for partitioned cache accessing and control. |
|
| |
14 | Processing element memory: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 11. Subject matter which controls the structure joining the
memory within an individual array processor element or associated
with an individual array processor element. |
| |
15 | Reconfiguring: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 11. Subject matter wherein an existing structure joining the
array processing elements is modified.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
709, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Multicomputer Data Transferring,
subclasses 221+ for reconfiguring in a multi-computer data transfer
network. |
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Data Processing
Systems: Input/Output,
subclass 104 for intra-system configuring not included in a
particular processing architecture. |
713, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Support,
subclass 100 for reconfiguring (e.g., changing system setting)
in a digital data processing system. |
|
| |
17 | Application specific: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 16. Subject matter wherein overall operation or process of the
array processor is directed toward a particular purpose.
| (1)
Note. Included here, for example, is generic pattern matching
not elsewhere provided for. |
| (2)
Note. Pattern matching for image processing is classified
elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
382, | Image Analysis, appropriate subclasses and particularly
subclasses 181+ for image analysis pattern recognition. |
|
| |
18 | Data flow array processor: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 16. Subject matter wherein the array processor performs a calculation
when all required data is present (data-driven).
| (1)
Note. This would include a wavefront array processor. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
25, | for a generic data flow processor. |
201, | for architecture based data flow instruction processing
including specific instruction implementation. |
|
| |
19 | Systolic array processor: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 16. Subject matter wherein data moves between the identical
processing elements in accordance with a global reference timing
signal. |
| |
20 | Multimode (e.g., MIMD to SIMD, etc.): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 16. Subject matter wherein the array processor may switch between
plural operating modes.
| (1)
Note. This might include, for example, an initial MIMD mode
which subsequently changes to an SIMD mode. | |
| |
22 | SIMD: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 16. Subject matter wherein the array processor operates in a
single instruction, multiple data mode. |
| |
23 | Superscalar: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 1. Subject matter comprising an architecture which determines
a group of upcoming instructions which do not mutually interfere
with each other and issues or dispatches this group simultaneously.
| (1)
Note. Excluded herein is specific instruction implementation
such as branching, store multiple, etc. See SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS,
SUBCLASS: notes below. |
| (2)
Note. Implementation of a generic instruction within a particular
instruction set is classified here. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
215, | for simultaneous issuance of multiple instructions
including specific instruction implementation. |
|
| |
24 | Long instruction word: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 1. Subject matter comprising an architecture which includes
compiler scheduled issuing of multiple opcodes per instruction.
| (1)
Note. Excluded herein is the specifics of the compiler. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
215, | for simultaneous issuance of multiple instructions
including specific instruction |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation,
and Management,
subclasses 140 through 161for a compiler in a software development system. |
|
| |
25 | Data driven or demand driven processor: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 1. Subject matter wherein a plural processor structure performs
a calculation when all required data is present (data-driven) or
when other processors request a calculation result (demand-driven).
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
18, | for data flow array processor. |
201, | for architecture based data flow instruction processing
including specific instruction implementation. |
|
| |
27 | Particular data driven memory structure: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 25. Subject matter including a data driven interface with specific
memory structure to enhance the data flow capability of the processor.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Memory,
subclasses 100+ for particular storage accessing and control. |
|
| |
28 | Distributed processing system: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 1. Subject matter including a particular architecture having
two or more physically separate processors performing different
tasks with shared resources such that their combined work contribute
to a common goal.
| (1)
Note. Subject matter including a distributed processing system
having significant multicomputer data transfer is classified elsewhere.
See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
| (2)
Note. Subject matter including a computer task management
or control system having significant process scheduling is classified
elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
709, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Multicomputer Data Transferring,
subclass 201 for distributed data processing having significant
multicomputer data transfer. |
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Virtual Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control,
subclasses 102 through 108for process scheduling in a computer task management
or control system. |
|
| |
29 | Interface: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 28. Subject matter wherein details of an interconnection which
mutually joins the processors are provided. |
| |
30 | Operation: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 28. Subject matter wherein functioning of the processors is
specified. |
| |
31 | Master/slave: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 30. Subject matter wherein the physically separate processors
include a primary processor (master) controlling the operation of
a secondary processor (slave).
| (1)
Note. Controlling of data transfer between master/slave
processors is classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
345, | Computer Graphics Processing and Selective Visual
Display Systems,
subclass 504 for a computer graphic processing system including master/slave
processors. |
709, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Multicomputer Data Transferring,
subclasses 208+ for specific data transferring in a
master/slave computer. |
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Data Processing
Systems: Input/Output,
subclass 110 for bus master/slave controlling. |
|
| |
32 | Microprocessor or multichip or multimodule processor having
sequential program control: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 1. Subject matter comprising a CPU on a single integrated circuit
chip or on plural integrated chips or in plural discrete units which
provide serial processing.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
345, | Computer Graphic Processing and Selective Visual
Display Systems,
subclass 519 for a computer graphic processing system on integrated
chip. |
708, | Electrical Computers: Arithmetic Processing and
Calculating,
subclasses 100+ and particularly subclasses 200+ for an
electric digital calculating computer which may utilize processor structure
similar to that contained herein. |
|
| |
34 | Including coprocessor: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 32. Subject matter including an auxiliary processor which provides
a supplemental function for or other assistance to a primary processor.
| (1)
Note. Details of the application or algorithm performed on
the coprocessor are classified elsewhere. See,
for example, SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
345, | Computer Graphics Processing and Selective Visual
Display Systems,
subclass 503 for a computer graphic processing system which
includes a coprocessor. |
|
| |
35 | Digital Signal Processor: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 34. Subject matter wherein the auxiliary processor is particularly
configured to perform high speed data manipulations.
| (1)
Note. Details of the application or algorithm performed on
the Digital Signal Processor are classified elsewhere. See, for
example, SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
708, | Electrical Computers: Arithmetic Processing and
Calculating,
subclasses 100+ for an electric digital calculating computer. |
|
| |
36 | Application specific: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 32. Subject matter wherein the processor is generically adapted
for a particular purpose.
| (1)
Note. Details of the application or algorithm performed on
the processor are classified elsewhere. | |
| |
37 | Programmable (e.g., EPROM): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 32. Subject matter wherein operation of the processor may be
externally modifiable.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
713, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Support,
subclasses 1+ for digital data processing system initialization
and configuration. |
|
| |
38 | Offchip interface: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 32. Subject matter wherein particular internal structure of
the processor is provided which allows interfacing from the processor
to an external device.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Data Processing
Systems: Input/Output,
subclass 1 for input/output data processing and
subclasses 305-317 for interface architecture intra-system connection. |
|
| |
40 | External sync or interrupt signal: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 38. Subject matter wherein the processor receives a synchronization
or interrupt signal from an outside source.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Data Processing
Systems: Input/Output,
subclasses 260+ for interrupt processing in general. |
713, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Support,
subclass 375 for synchronization of plural processors. |
|
| |
41 | RISC: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 32. Subject matter wherein the set of processing instructions
available is relatively small and rapidly executable (i.e., Reduced
Instruction Set Computing) and a new instruction is fetched during
the time when a previous instruction is executed. |
| |
42 | Operation: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 32. Subject matter wherein specific functioning of the processor
is recited. |
| |
43 | Mode switching: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 42. Subject matter wherein an ability to change between multiple
processor operating modes is recited. |
| |
200 | ARCHITECTURE BASED INSTRUCTION PROCESSING: |
| This subclass is indented under the class definition. Subject matter including instruction data processing for
particular processor architectures.
| (1)
Note. Instruction data are defined in the glossary for this
class to be data representative of an operation and identifying its
operands, if any. |
| (2)
Note. Instruction processing classified here is predicated
on a particular identifiable digital data processing system architecture
directing the nature of the instruction processing. Processing control,
however, is classified elsewhere. See SEARCH THIS CLASS,SUBCLASS
below. |
| (3)
Note. This subclass is for instruction processing forced
in a certain direction by an overall processing architecture. Digital
data processing system architectures and computer architectures,
per se, are classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS,
SUBCLASS: below. |
| (4)
Note. Register level transactions at the arithmetic logic
unit level (ALU-level) or functional unit level (FU-level) and logic
for realizing such transactions are often a part of instruction
processing, per se. However, general purpose digital logic circuits
are classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
| (5)
Note. This subclass represents a "special" category of instruction
processing dictated by an architectural construct. Instruction data
processing in support of data transferring including special software
interrupts, traps, and halts; non-logic and non-arithmetic functions
are classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS: below. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
1+, | for digital data processing system architectures
and computer architectures per se. |
25, | for instruction data processing in support of data
transferring. |
220+, | for processing control, per se. |
227, | for special instruction data processing in support
of testing, debugging, or emulation. |
244, | for software interrupts and traps. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
326, | Electronic Digital Logic Circuitry, appropriate subclasses for general purpose digital
logic circuitry including programmable logic arrays (PLA). |
708, | Electrical Computers: Arithmetic Processing and
Calculating,
subclasses 100+ for details of logic circuits for performing arithmetic
operations. |
714, | Error Detection/Correction and Fault Detection/Recovery,
subclass 34 for fault locating using a halt, subclass 35 for
fault locating using a substituted or added instruction. |
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation,
and Management,
subclasses 100 through 173for software development environments and tools,
per se. |
|
| |
201 | Data flow based system: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 200. Subject matter wherein initiation of instruction execution
is driven by availability of data required by the instruction.
| (1)
Note. This subclass is for data flow computing which generally
utilizes tokens for asynchronous passing of instructions or data
for execution by the appropriate unit. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
18, | for data flow array processor. |
25, | for data flow computer architectures, per se. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
709, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Multicomputer Data Transferring, appropriate subclassesfor use of tokens in certain multi-computer arrangements. |
|
| |
202 | Stack based computer: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 200. Subject matter wherein the architecture"s processor
is based upon a stack model and all instruction data processing
occurs through use of the stack.
| (1)
Note. The stack based computer includes, for example, HP
3000 computer. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
228, | for context preservation. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
709, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems:
Multicomputer Data Transferring, for pertinent subclass(es) as determined by schedule review. |
|
| |
203 | Multiprocessor instruction: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 200. Subject matter including processing of an instruction specific
for a plural processor computer architecture.
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
28+, | for a distributed processing system. |
32+, | for microprocessor or multichip or multimodule processor
having sequential |
|
| |
204 | INSTRUCTION ALIGNMENT: |
| This subclass is indented under the class definition. Subject matter including accessing and retrieval of instruction
data of a fixed or variable length from a memory or buffer and for shifting
of such instruction data to align it with a physical memory or buffer
boundary.
| (1)
Note. This subclass is for alignment of instruction
data. Subject matter directed to the big endian/ little
endian problem is properly classified here. Generic byte word
order rearranging is classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH
THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS below. |
| (2)
Note. This subclass accepts shifting instruction
data for alignment purposes. Shifting of memory spaces, such as
boundary alignment related to memory addressing and page mapping, is classified
elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
| (3)
Note. Emulation techniques often rely on instruction
alignment as part of an overall combination. This
subclass accepts only nominal recitations to emulation in combination
with instruction aligning. Emulation systems, per
se, are classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH
CLASS below. |
| (4)
Note. This subclass accepts only nominal recitations
to digital data processing system architectures and computer architectures, per
se, where realignment of an instruction is occurring. Architecture-based
instruction data processing in, for example, a
superscalar processor is classified elsewhere. See
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS below. |
| (5)
Note. Dynamic aligning of instruction data is proper
for this subclass. Compilers performing "static" alignment
functions are classified with software development tools. See
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
| (6)
Note. This subclass is directed to aligning instruction
data. Aligning other data in, for example, cache
memory is typically found elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH
CLASS below. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
23, | for superscalar processor. |
200+, | for architecture based instruction data processing. |
210, | for variable length instruction data decoding. |
300, | for generic byte-word order rearranging, bit-field
insertion and extraction, and string length and sequence
detecting. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
703, | Data Processing: Structural Design, Modeling, Simulation, and
Emulation, appropriate subclasses. |
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclass 2 for addressing extended or expanded memory, subclass
5 for addressing multiple memory modules, subclass 118
for cache memory accessing and control, per se, subclass
133 for cache memory entry replacement strategies, subclass
201 for address generation directed to slip control, misaligning and
boundary alignment, subclass 209 for page address generation
processing, subclass 212 for address generation by varying
bit-length or size. |
716, | Computer-Aided Design and Analysis of
Circuits and Semiconductor Masks, appropriate subclasses. |
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation, and
Management,
subclasses 140 through 161for compilers, per se. |
|
| |
205 | INSTRUCTION FETCHING: |
| This subclass is indented under the class definition. Subject matter directed to locating and retrieval of instruction
data for processing.
| (1)
Note. This subclass is concerned with locating and
retrieving instruction data indirect support of an instruction pipeline. Memory
accessing and control at other higher levels, such
as, cache memory, disk memory and shared memory are
classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
| (2)
Note. This subclass only accepts nominal recitation
of addressing schemes and address data generation. Address
formation, addressing of operands, and address generation
in response to a microinstruction is elsewhere. See SEE
OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
| (3)
Note. This subclass only accepts nominal recitation
of addressing schemes and address data generation. Generalized address
formation and addressing in combination with particular memory systems
is classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Data Processing
Systems: Input/Output,
subclasses 5+ for Input/Output data processing macro
language and command processing |
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclasses 1+ for addressing combined with specific memory configuration or
system, subclasses 101+ for accessing and control
of specific memory compositions, subclasses 118+ for
cache memory, and subclasses 147+ for shared memory access
and control, subclass 214 for operand address generation, and
subclass 215 for address formation in response to a microinstruction. |
|
| |
207 | Prefetching: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 205. Subject matter including fetching of a given instruction
or variable before it is utilized.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for advance fetching
of instruction data. pipelining is classified elsewhere. Memory
access |
| (2)
Note. This subclass is for the fetching of instruction
data. Generating of addresses for implementing
a prefetch is classified elsewhere. |
| (3)
Note. Prefetching for branch target addressing is
classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
237, | for branch target instruction addressing. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclass 169 for memory access pipelining, and subclass
213 for formation or generation of prefetch addresses. |
|
| |
208 | INSTRUCTION DECODING (E.G., BY MICROINSTRUCTION, START ADDRESS
GENERATOR, HARDWIRED): |
| This subclass is indented under the class definition. Subject matter including an internal hardware, firmware, or
software operation by which a computer system determines the meaning
of an instruction"s operation code, control bits, and
operands.
| (1)
Note. This subclass is for decoding instruction
data to determine its meaning for subsequent execution or decision making. Generic
decoding circuits and methods and decoder circuits and methods
are classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
326, | Electronic Digital Logic Circuitry,
subclasses 105+ for decoding circuitry. |
|
| |
209 | Decoding instruction to accommodate plural instruction
interpretations (e.g., different dialects, languages, emulation, etc.): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 208. Subject matter including means or steps for decoding a same
instruction identifier to mean a different operation depending on
a particular state or condition within the system.
| (1)
Note. This subclass is for instruction decoding
for plural interpretations. Emulation, per se, is
classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS note below. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
703, | Data Processing: Structural Design, Modeling, Simulation, and
Emulation, appropriate subclasses. |
704, | Data Processing: Speech Signal Processing, Linguistics, Language
Translation, and Audio Compression/Decompression,
subclasses 2+ for translation machine, subclass 9 for natural
language translation. |
716, | Computer-Aided Design and Analysis of
Circuits and Semiconductor Masks, appropriate subclasses. |
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation, and
Management,
subclasses 140 through 161for compilers, per se. |
|
| |
210 | Decoding instruction to accommodate variable length instruction
or operand: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 208. Subject matter including means or steps for decoding instruction
data whose length varies.
| (1)
Note. This subclass is for decoding instructions
whose lengths vary. Alignment of instructions to a boundary
is classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS note
below. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
204, | for alignment of instruction data. |
|
| |
211 | Decoding instruction to generate an address of a microroutine: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 208. Subject matter including means or steps for utilizing instruction
data to develop a starting or initial address of a microroutine
responsible for controlling execution of the instruction.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclass 215 for generation of a memory address in response
to a microroutine. |
|
| |
212 | Decoding by plural parallel decoders: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 208. Subject matter including means or steps for decoding an
instruction in parallel steps by plural decoding elements.
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
1+, | for parallel computer architecture. |
|
| |
213 | Predecoding of instruction component: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 208. Subject matter for decoding part of an instruction at an
earlier processor cycle than the remainder of the instruction.
| (1)
Note. This subclass will accept only nominal recitations
of instruction caching in regards to pre-decoding. Caching, per
se, is classified elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. This technique is often used in combination
with branch instruction processing in order to prefetch for anticipated
branch execution and in parallel processing. This
subclass accepts only significant recitations of pre-decoding
in overall combinations directed to prefetching, branch
instruction processing, and parallel processing. Prefetching, branch
instruction processing, and parallel processing, per se, are
classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS: below. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
207, | for instruction prefetching. |
215, | for decoding for data dependency processing for
parallel issuance. |
233+, | for branching. |
|
| |
214 | INSTRUCTION ISSUING: |
| This subclass is indented under the class definition. Subject matter including means or steps for dispatching
an instruction for execution (e.g., designating
a register after resolving data conflicts).
| (1)
Note. Dispatching in the field of process control
for task management dealing with process scheduling, load
balancing, etc., is classified elsewhere. See
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
201, | for data flow architecture based instruction processing
system. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Virtual
Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control, appropriate subclassesfor task management or task control. |
|
| |
215 | Simultaneous issuance of multiple instructions: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 214. Subject matter including means or steps for issuing plural
instructions in parallel (e.g., superscalar, very
long instruction word (VLIW)).
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for dynamic, hardware-based
multiple instruction issuance or scheduling. Static instruction
scheduling by a compiler or an assembler is classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
23, | for superscalar processing architecture. |
24, | for long instruction word processing architecture. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation, and
Management,
subclasses 140 through 161for compilers, per se. |
|
| |
216 | DYNAMIC INSTRUCTION DEPENDENCY CHECKING, MONITORING, OR CONFLICT
RESOLUTION: |
| This subclass is indented under the class definition. Subject matter including means or steps for on-the-fly
testing of instructions and operands to assess conflicts related
to data or functional unit availability (e.g., identifying dependencies, attempting
to resolve dependencies, or both).
| (1)
Note. This subclass is directed to means and steps
for controlling instruction issuing or executing which takes into account
readiness of the instruction processing resource(s). Task
resource management is classified elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. This subclass is also for dynamic hardware
based dependency checking. Dependency checking performed
by a compiler is classified elsewhere. |
| (3)
Note. Reliability and availability of functional
units include the determination of a fault condition and are classified
elsewhere. |
| (4)
Note. This subclass includes dealing with resource
management problems within the instruction stream, generally at
the ALU functional unit level. Resource management in a
manufacturing environment is classified elsewhere. |
| (5)
Note. This subclass deals with reserving use of
functional units at the instruction level of a digital data processing
system. Reservations for seat assignment for travel or
entertainment are classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
700, | Data Processing: Generic Control Systems
or Specific Applications,
subclasses 99 through 102for manufacturing environment resource allocation. |
705, | Data Processing: Financial, Business Practice, Management, or
Cost/Price Determination, particularly
subclasses 5+ for reservation, check-in, and
booking for reserving space, subclasses 7.13 through
7.26 for scheduling and allocating resources for administrative
functions in a business environment. |
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclass 125 for instruction data caching and subclass 169 for
memory access pipelining. |
714, | Error Detection/Correction and Fault Detection/Recovery,
subclasses 1+ for reliability and availability. |
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation, and
Management,
subclasses 140 through 161for compilers, per se, and dependency
checking. |
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Virtual
Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control,
subclass 106 for dependency based cooperative processing of
multiple programs working together to accomplish a larger task. |
|
| |
217 | Scoreboarding, reservation station, or
aliasing: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 216. Subject matter utilizing scoreboarding, reservation
stations, aliasing (i.e., renaming), or combinations
thereof for dependency checking and resolution.
| (1)
Note. This subclass is for use of a hardware-based
scoreboard, reservation station, or alias table
for determining or resolving instruction data dependencies. File
maintenance (e.g., renaming) is classified
elsewhere. Task management, per se, is
classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
707, | Data Processing: Database, Data
Mining, and File Management or Data Structures,
subclasses 609 through 686for database maintenance including synchronizing, archiving, backing up
and recovering databases; subclasses 687 through 704 for
data integrity in databases; subclasses 781 through 789
for access control to a database or file in a computer environment; subclasses
790 through 812 for database design including data structures and
data structure management; subclasses 813 through 820 for garbage
collection in database environments, and subclasses 821
through 831 for file management, file systems and file
directory structures. |
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Virtual
Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control, appropriate subclassesfor task management. |
|
| |
218 | Commitment control or register bypass: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 216. Subject matter including means or steps for controlling
the writing of results to registers and for bypassing results around
registers to eliminate or alleviate data availability conflicts.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for systems that control
the commitment of results to the register file and for bypassing
results around the register file to functional units to alleviate
data dependency, for example, as in getting data
to a functional unit in deeply pipelined or superscalar systems. Data
consistency in a cache or cache by-pass is classified elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. This subclass provides for out-of - order
execution but assures in order commitment of results to
the register file. However, memory accessing techniques, per
se, are classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH
CLASS note below. |
| (3)
Note. Context preserving, per se, is
classified elsewhere. See SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS
note below. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
228, | for context preservation. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclass 3 for addressing cache memory; subclass
203 for virtual addressing 141+ for cache coherency, in
particular subclass 142 for write through and 143 for write back; and
subclass 155 for read-modify-write technique. |
|
| |
219 | Reducing an impact of a stall or pipeline bubble: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 216. Subject matter including means or steps for allowing an
instruction execution to catch up with other instruction in a pipeline
without flushing that execution pipeline.
| (1)
Note. This subclass is directed to reducing a time
penalty of pipeline stalls or pipeline bubbles due to
data hazards or instruction hazards. Conditional branching
creates similar data hazards and pipeline stalls. How ever, pipeline
stall or pipeline bubble due to branching are classified elsewhere. See
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS note below. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
233+, | for branching when an instruction hazard exists. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclass 140 for data hazards related caching and subclass 169
for memory access pipelining. |
|
| |
220 | PROCESSING CONTROL: |
| This subclass is indented under the class definition. Subject matter including a dynamic control of execution, processing, or
sequencing of instruction data within a processor.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for generic micro-sequencing
control or hardware sequencing control of instruction data within
a processor. Specialized architecture-based
instruction processing is classified elsewhere. See SEE
OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS note below. |
| (2)
Note. This subclass is directed to instruction processing
and machine level Instruction execution. However, instruction
sequence control within a compiler, by a compiler, or
by an operating system is classified elsewhere. See SEE
OR SEARCH CLASS note below. |
| (3)
Note. This subclass is for processing instructions. Sequencing
as is common in computerized numerical controllers (CNC), industrial
controllers, computer driven machining, etc., is
classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS note below. |
| (4)
Note. Hardwired sequencers are also often referred
to as "sequential state machines" in the art. They
are appropriately classified here when they are performing
control or sequencing of instruction data within a processor. |
| (5)
Note. Graphic command processing is classified elsewhere. See
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS note below. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
200+, | for architecture-based instruction processing. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
345, | Computer Graphic Processing and Selective Visual
Display Systems,
subclass 522 for graphic command processing. |
700, | Data Processing: Generic Control Systems
or Specific Applications,
subclasses 1 through 89for general purpose computer control systems; subclasses
95-212 for manufacturing control systems; and
particularly subclasses 159-195 for machine tool control
systems. |
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation, and
Management,
subclasses 140 through 161for a compiler in a software development system. |
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Virtual
Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control, appropriate subclassesfor operating system task management and control. |
|
| |
221 | Arithmetic operation instruction processing: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 220. Subject matter for control of execution or processing of
instruction data peculiar to arithmetic operation (e.g., add, subtract, multiply, etc.).
| (1)
Note. This subclass is directed to control of execution
or processing of an instruction peculiar to arithmetic operation. Arithmetic
functional units, that is, machines which carry
out arithmetical calculations, per se, are classified
elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS below. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
708, | Electrical Computers: Arithmetic Processing
and Calculating,
subclasses 100+ for electrical calculators; subclasses
200+ for specialized functions performed by an electrical
digital calculating computer such as function generation and filtering; subclasses 400+ for
transforms (e.g., Fourier); subclasses
440+ for trigonometric functions; and subclasses
490+ for arithmetic operations, per se. |
|
| |
222 | Floating point or vector: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 221. Subject matter for control of execution or processing of
instruction data peculiar to a floating point or vector operation.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
708, | Electrical Computers: Arithmetic Processing
and Calculating,
subclasses 495+ for floating point arithmetical operations. |
|
| |
223 | Logic operation instruction processing: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 220. Subject matter for control of execution or processing of
instruction data peculiar to logic operation (e.g., AND, OR, exclusive
OR, etc.).
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for the control of
execution of instruction data peculiar to logical operations. Digital logic, per
se, (e.g., AND gates, OR
gates, combinations of gates, etc.) is
classified elsewhere. See SEE OR SEARCH CLASS note below. |
| (2)
Note. This subclass is concerned with processing
instruction data within a processor. Processing
of pixels using logical operation in the field of computer graphics
processing, however, are classified elsewhere. See
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS note below. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
326, | Electronic Digital Logic Circuitry, appropriate subclasses for logic circuit and interface, per
se. |
345, | Computer Graphic Processing and Selective Visual
Display Systems,
subclasses 523+ for logical operations in computer graphics. |
|
| |
224 | Masking: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 223. Subject matter for control of execution or processing of
instruction data peculiar to blocking and passing data elements
contained within memory words or processor registers.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for control of execution
of instruction data which is peculiar to masking. Generic
masking of digital words in a digital data processing
system is classified elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. Masking is a generic technique for stripping, passing, eliminating, or
blocking a part of a digital word. Masking
used as a subcombination to an overall combination such as, for
example, to enable or disable interrupts or to enable
or disable a status line is classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
5, | for masking to control an access to data in vector
register of a vector processor. |
300, | for generic masking of digital data. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Input/Output,
subclasses 262+ for interrupt processing in relation to masking. |
714, | Error Detection/Correction and Fault Detection/Recovery,
subclasses 3+ for masking in relation to fault recovery. |
|
| |
225 | Processing control for data transfer: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 220. Subject matter including means or steps for processing instruction
data that specifically support or perform a data transfer operation.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for processing instruction
data that performs data transfer. Data transfer, per
se, is classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
370, | Multiplex Communications, appropriate subclasses for multiplex communications, per
se. |
375, | Pulse or Digital Communications, appropriate subclasses for pulse or digital communications, per
se. |
709, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Multicomputer
Data Transferring, appropriate subclassesfor multicomputer data transferring . |
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Data Processing
Systems: Input/Output,
subclasses 5+ for I/O command processing, subclass
33 for I/O data transfer specifying. |
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclass 214 for operand address generation and subclass 215
for microinstruction address generation. |
|
| |
226 | Instruction modification based on condition: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 220. Subject matter including means or steps for changing the
operation of an instruction based upon some condition by substituting
or changing the instruction in some manner.
| (1)
Note. This subclass also provides for modification
of microinstruction in order to perform a different operation. |
| (2)
Note. This subclass provides for modification of
an instruction to change its operation or data usage. Modification
of instruction address for the purpose of branching is classified
elsewhere. |
| (3)
Note. Instruction substitution or modification in
support of tracing or fault locating is classified
elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
233+, | for branching, per se. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
714, | Error Detection/Correction and Fault Detection/Recovery,
subclass 34 for
instruction substitution in support of fault locating. |
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation, and
Management,
subclasses 100 through 167for software development tools. |
|
| |
227 | Specialized instruction processing in support of testing, debugging, emulation: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 220. Subject matter including means or steps for execution or
sequencing of instruction data that support testing, debugging, or
emulation.
| (1)
Note. Classification in this subclass requires more
than nominal recitation of execution of an instruction. Specific means
or steps involved in the specific execution of the instruction itself
are properly classified in this subclass. |
| (2)
Note. This subclass is directed to instruction level
processing for debugging. A software development environment
for compilers is classified elsewhere. |
| (3)
Note. This subclass is distinguished from the related
topics under data processing system reliability and availability. There, a
fault condition must be encountered and the fault
is either detected, located, or recovered from, and nominal
instruction data processing may be claimed. For classification
here, a fault may be nominally recited but substantial
instruction processing must be claimed. |
| (4)
Note. This subclass is distinguished from emulation, per
se. There, nominal instruction data processing
may be claimed. For classification here, an emulation
may be nominally recited, but substantial instruction processing
must be claimed. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
703, | Data Processing: Structural Design, Modeling, Simulation, and
Emulation, appropriate subclasses. |
714, | Error Detection/Correction and Fault Detection/Recovery, appropriate subclasses, particularly
subclasses 35+ for debugging and fault locating. |
716, | Computer-Aided Design and Analysis of
Circuits and Semiconductor Masks, appropriate subclasses. |
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation, and
Management,
subclasses 124 through 135for software testing or debugging and subclasses
140-161 for compilers, per se. |
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Virtual
Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control, appropriate subclassesfor task management. |
|
| |
228 | Context preserving (e.g., context
swapping, check-pointing, register windowing): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 220. Subject matter including means for storing volatile data
contained in processor registers such that the volatile data can
be restored at some point later in time.
| (1)
Note. This subclass is directed to the register
level transactions necessary for preserving the context
of an instruction or an instruction pipeline. Multitasking, context
switching, and context swapping at the task or operating
system level are classified elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. This subclass concerns itself with data in
the pipeline at a point in time when a context swap is to be performed. The
control of the commitment of results to a register file or for bypassing
results around a register file to functional units to alleviate
data dependency is classified elsewhere. |
| (3)
Note. Transactions with higher level memory in a
digital data processing system memory hierarchy such as page swapping
or write-back is classified elsewhere with the memory
accessing and controlling art. |
| (4)
Note. The term "windowing" also applies to operator
interfaces and often includes logical operations at the register level. However, register
windowing here is for instruction registers and instruction pipelines. Windowing
for operator interfaces is classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
218, | for commitment control or register bypass. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
345, | Computer Graphics Processing and Selective Visual
Display Systems,
subclasses 581 through 618for a display attribute controller. |
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclass 3 for addressing cache memory; subclasses
141+ for cache coherency, specifically subclass
142 for cache write-through, subclass 143 for
cache write-back, and subclasses 203+ for virtual
addressing techniques. |
715, | Data Processing: Presentation Processing
of Document, Operator Interface Processing, and
Screen Saver Display Processing,
subclasses 781 through 807for operator interface windowing. |
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Virtual
Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control,
subclass 108 for context switching at the task or operating
system level. |
|
| |
229 | Mode switch or change: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 220. Subject matter including means or steps for changing a mode
of processing an instruction (e.g., sequential
processing to parallel processing, etc.).
| (1)
Note. A digital data processing system can have
a variety of mode changes. In general, substantial
recitation of a mode change type in combination with nominal recitation
of instruction processing is classified with the mode change type. More
than nominal recitation of instruction data execution is required
for classification herein. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
380, | Cryptography, appropriate subclasses for security, per
se. |
713, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Support,
subclasses 2 and 100 for mode changing by booting or reconfiguring. |
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Virtual
Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control,
subclass 108 for context switching at the task or operating
system level. |
726, | Information Security,
subclasses 1 through 36for information security in computers or digital
processing system. |
|
| |
230 | Generating next microinstruction address: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 220. Subject matter including means or steps for generating an
address of a next microinstruction in sequence to be processed.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for details of generating
a next microinstruction address. Generation of a next microinstruction
address is classified elsewhere. Similarly, generation
of a next address for a data element, per se, is
classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
207, | for prefetch of instruction data. |
233+, | for branching. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclasses 200+ for address formation. |
|
| |
231 | Detecting end or completion of microprogram: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 220. Subject matter including means or steps for detecting or
sensing a completion or end of a microprogram routine.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for detection of the
completion of execution of a microprogram routine. Macroprogram branching
and microprogram branching are classified elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. Interruption of the end of a microprogram
routine is classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
233+, | for macroprogram branching and microprogram branching. |
244, | for exception processing or interrupt processing. |
|
| |
232 | Hardwired controller: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 220. Subject matter utilizing a sequential state machine, hardwired
logic, or both for sequencing a flow of instruction data.
| (1)
Note. Controlling and sequencing are common functions
of digital data processing systems. This subclass provides
for details of a processor"s internal operation and sequencing of
instruction data. Numerical controllers and sequencers, per
se, are common in industrial control and are classified
elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. Hardwired controllers and sequencers are commonly
used for their inherent speed advantage. This subclass provides
for details of a processor"s internal operation and sequencing of
instruction data. Hardwired controllers directed to application
specific data processing or ASICs (application specific
integrated circuits) for specific application, per
se, such as digital filtering, graphics data processing, and
arithmetic data processing, are classified with the application
art area. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
326, | Electronic Digital Logic Circuitry,
subclasses 37+ for multifunctional circuits including finite state machines. |
345, | Computer Graphics Processing and Selective Visual
Display Systems,
subclass 522 for graphic command processing, |
377, | Electrical Pulse Counters, Pulse Dividers, or
Shift Registers: Circuits and Systems,
subclasses 27+ for circuit or device that includes more than a
counter or register but is not sufficient for classification with
a particular art device; and subclasses 118+ for
pulse counting or dividing chains. |
700, | Data Processing: Generic Control Systems
or Specific Applications,
subclasses 1 through 89for industrial controllers and numerical controllers, and
subclasses 95-212 for continuous material processing and machine
tool control. |
703, | Data Processing: Structural Design, Modeling, Simulation, and
Emulation, appropriate subclasses. |
708, | Electrical Computers: Arithmetic Processing
and Calculating,
subclasses 200+ for specialized function performed, particularly
subclasses 300+ for digital filtering and subclasses 490+ for
arithmetical processing. |
716, | Computer-Aided Design and Analysis of
Circuits and Semiconductor Masks, appropriate subclasses. |
|
| |
233 | Branching (e.g., delayed
branch, loop control, branch predict, interrupt): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 220. Subject matter including means or steps for performing a
change in instruction data flow brought about by instruction data
execution or external stimuli.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for instruction data
flow changes. Program execution flow changes for the purpose
of task management and control related to process or job execution
is classified elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. Address generation for branching is classified
elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclass 125 for instruction data caching, subclass
169 for memory access pipelining, and subclass 213 for
address generation for branching. |
714, | Error Detection/Correction and Fault Detection/Recovery, appropriate subclasses, particularly
subclasses 50+ for a state out of sequence error detection. |
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Virtual
Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control, appropriate subclasses for task management and control
related to process or job execution, particularly
subclasses 102 through 108for process scheduling. |
|
| |
234 | Conditional branching: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 233. Subject matter including means or steps for supporting changes
in program execution flow based upon some condition within the processor (e.g., branch
if equal, branch if zero, etc.). |
| |
237 | Prefetching a branch target (i.e., look ahead): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 234. Subject matter including means or steps for prefetching
an instruction from the target of a branch in anticipation of the
branch being taken.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for prefetch in relation
to a conditional branch. Generic prefetching is classified elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. Address generation for prefetching is classified
elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
207, | for generic prefetch of instruction data. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclass 213 for address generation for prefetching. |
|
| |
238 | Branch target buffer: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 237. Subject matter including means or steps for memorizing or
holding the last several branch target addresses so that if a branch
is encountered again, the target address does not have
to be recalculated. |
| |
239 | Branch prediction: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 234. Subject matter including means or steps for attempting to
theorize or guess an outcome of a branch before such outcome can
be determined.
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclasses 204+ for address mapping by prediction or look-ahead. |
|
| |
240 | History table: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 239. Subject matter including means or steps for memorizing
an outcome of the last several branch instructions encountered and
use that to more accurately predict an outcome of that same branch
instructions if they are encountered again in the future. |
| |
241 | Loop execution: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 233. Subject matter including means or steps for controlling
an execution of a program loop.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for details of an internal
control of a processor and sequencing of instruction data for
a performance of loops. Programming of loops and compiling
of loop statements are classified elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. Subroutine calling and returning is classified
elsewhere. |
| (3)
Note. Interrupt service and return is classified
elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
242, | for macroinstruction routine. |
243, | for microinstruction subroutine. |
244, | for exception processing (interrupts and
traps). |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
703, | Data Processing: Structural Design, Modeling, Simulation, and
Emulation, appropriate subclasses. |
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Data Processing
Systems: Input/Output,
subclasses 260+ for interrupt service and interrupt return processing
in a digital data processing system. |
716, | Computer-Aided Design and Analysis of
Circuits and Semiconductor Masks, appropriate subclasses. |
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation, and
Management,
subclasses 124 through 135for software testing or debugging and subclasses
140-161 for compilers, per se. |
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Virtual
Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control, appropriate subclasses for task management and control
related to process or job execution, particularly
subclasses 102 through 108for process scheduling. |
|
| |
242 | To macro-instruction routine: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 233. Subject matter including means or steps for accessing and
performing a particular predefined routine.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for the details of
the internal sequencing and processing of instruction
data for performing routines not otherwise provided for. For
example, graphic command processing, arithmetic
operation command processing, and logic operation command
processing are classified elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. The combination of an applications art area
with macroinstruction or command processing is classified
in the art area. For example, graphic
command processing, emulators, compilers, and
natural language processing are classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
345, | Computer Graphics Processing and Selective Visual
Display Systems,
subclass 522 for graphic command processing, |
703, | Data Processing: Structural Design, Modeling, Simulation, and
Emulation, appropriate subclasses. |
704, | Data Processing: Speech Signal Processing, Linguistic, Language
Translation, and Audio Compression/Decompression,
subclass 9 for natural language translation. |
716, | Computer-Aided Design and Analysis of
Circuits and Semiconductor Masks, appropriate subclasses. |
717, | Data Processing: Software Development, Installation, and
Management,
subclasses 136 through 161for compilers or translators. |
|
| |
243 | To microinstruction subroutine: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 233. Subject matter including means or steps for calling microcode
subroutine from another microroutine.
| (1)
Note. Subroutine for industrial control or numerical
control is classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
700, | Data Processing: Generic Control Systems
or Specific Applications,
subclasses 1 through 89for generic industrial or numerical controllers. |
|
| |
244 | Exception processing (e.g., interrupts
and traps): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 233. Subject matter including means or steps for handling asynchronous
or unexpected changes in instruction data flow.
| (1)
Note. This subclass provides for details of the
internal operation of a processor for responding to an interrupt
by the processor. Subject matter directed to queuing interrupts, prioritizing
interrupts or signals in a digital data processing system is classified
elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. Details of interrupt processing for the purposes
of task management or multitasking are classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
40, | for an external sync or interrupt signal in a processing
architecture having sequential program control. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
710, | Electrical Computers and Digital Data Processing
Systems: Input/Output,
subclasses 260+ for interrupt queuing and prioritizing. |
718, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Virtual
Machine Task or Process Management or Task Management/Control,
subclasses 107 through 108for multitasking, time sharing. |
|
| |
248 | Writable/changeable control store architecture: |
| This subclass is indented under subclass 245. Subject matter having a microprogram storage that is writable/changeable
so that a different microprogram may be installed.
| (1)
Note. This subclass includes details of an arrangement
of the micromemory within a microsequencer. |
| (2)
Note. Writable control store architectures are properly
classified here. Also a product by process PLA
operating as a microprogram ASIC could go here. However, transistor
level or logic gate level chip design is classified elsewhere. |
| (3)
Note. Classification herein requires more than nominal
recitation of microcode in combination with writable control store. Memory
accessing and memory addressing are classified elsewhere. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
37, | for a specific sequence control processing architecture
with nominal recitation of EPROM. |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
326, | Electronic Digital Logic Circuitry,
subclasses 37+ for multifunctional or programmable logic including
PLA, PAL, PLD, etc. |
365, | Static Information Storage and Retrieval, appropriate subclasses for details of memory design
at the transistor or gate level. |
703, | Data Processing: Structural Design, Modeling, Simulation, and
Emulation, appropriate subclasses. |
711, | Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems: Memory,
subclasses 100+ for memory accessing and control. |
716, | Computer-Aided Design and Analysis of
Circuits and Semiconductor Masks, appropriate subclasses. |
|
| |
300 | BYTE -WORD ORDER REARRANGING, BIT -FIELD
INSERTION OR EXTRACTION, STRING
LENGTH DETECTING, OR SEQUENCE
DETECTING: |
| This subclass is indented under the class definition. Subject matter having means or step for shuffling, adding, removing
of bit or for recognizing a sequence of bytes in a larger string
of bytes not provided for by the subclasses above.
| (1)
Note. This subclass is for generic processing of
digital words including sorting, list processing and bit
or byte operations at the word level. Instruction processing
for logical operations on digital words and digital logic, per
se, is classified elsewhere. |
| (2)
Note. This subclass does not accept generic processing
of digital words for the expressed purpose of converting one code
to another code (e.g., BCD =>BINARY). These
teachings are classified elsewhere. Nor does this subclass accept
encryption. Encryption is classified elsewhere. |
| (3)
Note. Processing of digital words to an expressed
filtering effect on acquired signals or an arithmetic
operation on a series of digital words is classified elsewhere. |
| (4)
Note. Searching and sorting in databases, files, and
word processing applications are not classified here and instead
are classified with the respective application art areas. |
SEE OR SEARCH THIS CLASS, SUBCLASS:
220+, | for specialized instruction data processing (e.g., for
debugging, for logic operations, for context
preserving, etc.). |
SEE OR SEARCH CLASS:
341, | Coded Data Generation or Conversion, appropriate subclasses for analog-to-digital
converters and digital-to-digital code converters. |
380, | Cryptography,
subclasses 6+ for electrical signal masking, subclasses
9+ for electrical signal modification (e.g., scrambling). |
707, | Data Processing: Database, Data
Mining, and File Management or Data Structures,
subclasses 609 through 686for database maintenance including synchronizing, archiving, backing up
and recovering databases; subclasses 758 through 780 for
record, file and data search and comparison; subclasses
687 through 704 for data integrity in databases; subclasses
781 through 789 for access control to a database or file in a computer
environment; subclasses 790 through 812 for database design
including data structures and data structure management; subclasses
813 through 820 for garbage collection in database environments, and
subclasses 821 through 831 for file management, file systems and
file directory structures. |
708, | Electrical Computers: Arithmetic Processing
and Calculating,
subclasses 300+ for digital filtering and subclasses 490+ for
arithmetical processing. |
|
| |
E-SUBCLASSES
The E-subclasses in U.S. Class 712 provide for arrangements
for program to control the execution, processing, or sequencing
of instruction data within a processor such as Micro-control or
micro-program arrangements; arrangements for executing machine-instructions; arrangements
for executing sub-programs, i.e. combinations of several instructions;
etc.
E9.001 | ARRANGEMENTS FOR PROGRAM CONTROL, E.G., CONTROL UNIT (EPO): |
| This main group provides for the control of execution, processing,
or sequencing of instruction data within a processor. This subclass
is substantially the same in scope as ECLA classification G06F9/00. |
| |
E9.02 | For comparing (EPO): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass E9.016. This subclass
is substantially the same in scope as ECLA classification G06F9/30C. |
| |
E9.04 | Indirect addressing (EPO): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass E9.038. This subclass
is substantially the same in scope as ECLA classification G06F9/35.
| (1)
Note: Subject matter of this subgroup type includes using
a single address operand, e.g., address register. | |
| |
E9.041 | Indexed addressing (EPO): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass E9.038. This subclass
is substantially the same in scope as ECLA classification G06F9/355.
| (1)
Note: Subject matter of this subgroup type includes using
more than one address operand. | |
| |
E9.072 | Decoding (EPO): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass E9.071. This subclass
is substantially the same in scope as ECLA classification G06F9/38T2. |
| |
E9.077 | Conditional (EPO): |
| This subclass is indented under subclass E9 .075.
This subclass is substantially the same in scope as ECLA classification
G06F9/32B4. |
| |