Difference between revisions of "Application Processor"

From The iPhone Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Processor List)
Line 19: Line 19:
 
* [[S5L8960]] A7 ([[iPhone 5s]], [[iPad mini 2]], [[iPad mini 3]])
 
* [[S5L8960]] A7 ([[iPhone 5s]], [[iPad mini 2]], [[iPad mini 3]])
 
* [[S5L8965]] A7 Variant ([[iPad Air]])
 
* [[S5L8965]] A7 Variant ([[iPad Air]])
* [[T7000]] A8 ([[J42dAP|Apple TV (4th generation)]], [[HomePod]], [[iPad mini 4]], [[N61AP|iPhone 6]], [[N56AP|iPhone 6 Plus]], [[N102AP|iPod touch (6th generation)]])
+
* [[T7000]] A8 ([[J42dAP|Apple TV HD]], [[HomePod]], [[iPad mini 4]], [[N61AP|iPhone 6]], [[N56AP|iPhone 6 Plus]], [[N102AP|iPod touch (6th generation)]])
 
* [[T7001]] A8X ([[iPad Air 2]])
 
* [[T7001]] A8X ([[iPad Air 2]])
 
* [[S7002]] S1 ([[Apple Watch (1st generation)]])
 
* [[S7002]] S1 ([[Apple Watch (1st generation)]])

Revision as of 15:19, 20 September 2020

The application processor is the technical term given to a processor of an iDevice. There have been many incarnations of processors for Apple's mobile devices.

Features

Each revision is an ARM SoC tailored to the device's needs. All of Apple's SoC platforms have proprietary PowerVR graphics, public key encryption accelerators, hardware crypto and so on. The cores are mainly generic ARM ones, however, in the case of Swift, Apple used their own core design, compatible with ARMv7-A architecture and VFPv4 floating point.

Processor List


See Also