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Multiprocessing
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====Tightly coupled multiprocessor system==== Tightly coupled multiprocessor systems contain multiple CPUs that are connected at the bus level. These CPUs may have access to a central shared memory (SMP or [[Uniform Memory Access|UMA]]), or may participate in a memory hierarchy with both local and shared memory (SM)([[non-uniform memory access|NUMA]]). The [[IBM p690]] Regatta is an example of a high end SMP system. [[Intel]] [[Xeon]] processors dominated the multiprocessor market for business PCs and were the only major x86 option until the release of [[AMD]]'s [[Opteron]] range of processors in 2004. Both ranges of processors had their own onboard cache but provided access to shared memory; the Xeon processors via a common pipe and the Opteron processors via independent pathways to the system [[Random-access memory|RAM]]. Chip multiprocessors, also known as [[Multi-core (computing)|multi-core]] computing, involves more than one processor placed on a single chip and can be thought of the most extreme form of tightly coupled multiprocessing. Mainframe systems with multiple processors are often tightly coupled.
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