pipeline

from WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
pipeline
    n 1: gossip spread by spoken communication; "the news of their
         affair was spread by word of mouth" [syn: {grapevine},
         {pipeline}, {word of mouth}]
    2: a pipe used to transport liquids or gases; "a pipeline runs
       from the wells to the seaport" [syn: {pipeline}, {line}]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
pipeline \pipeline\, pipe line \pipe line\
   1. A line of pipe with pumping machinery and apparatus for
      conveying liquids, gases, or finely divided solids, such
      as petroleum or natural gas, between distant points.
      [Webster 1913 Suppl. +PJC]

   2. fig. an information channel direct from the source.
      [PJC]

   3. the set of stages and processes from the invention or
      design of a product to its ultimate use, production, or
      commercial sale. Used commonly in the phrase

   {in the pipeline}, i. e. still in preparation or under
      development.
      [PJC]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Pipe-line \Pipe"-line`\, v. t.
   To convey by a pipe line; to furnish with a pipe line or pipe
   lines.
   [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
    
from The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
pipeline
pipelined
pipelining

   <architecture> A sequence of {functional units} ("stages")
   which performs a task in several steps, like an assembly line
   in a factory.  Each functional unit takes inputs and produces
   outputs which are stored in its output {buffer}.  One stage's
   output buffer is the next stage's input buffer.  This
   arrangement allows all the stages to work in parallel thus
   giving greater throughput than if each input had to pass
   through the whole pipeline before the next input could enter.

   The costs are greater latency and complexity due to the need
   to synchronise the stages in some way so that different inputs
   do not interfere.  The pipeline will only work at full
   efficiency if it can be filled and emptied at the same rate
   that it can process.

   Pipelines may be synchronous or asynchronous.  A synchronous
   pipeline has a master clock and each stage must complete its
   work within one cycle.  The minimum clock period is thus
   determined by the slowest stage.  An asynchronous pipeline
   requires {handshaking} between stages so that a new output is
   not written to the interstage buffer before the previous one
   has been used.

   Many {CPUs} are arranged as one or more pipelines, with
   different stages performing tasks such as fetch instruction,
   decode instruction, fetch arguments, arithmetic operations,
   store results.  For maximum performance, these rely on a
   continuous stream of instructions fetched from sequential
   locations in memory.  Pipelining is often combined with
   {instruction prefetch} in an attempt to keep the pipeline
   busy.

   When a {branch} is taken, the contents of early stages will
   contain instructions from locations after the branch which
   should not be executed.  The pipeline then has to be flushed
   and reloaded.  This is known as a {pipeline break}.

   (1996-10-13)
    
from Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
67 Moby Thesaurus words for "pipeline":
      adjutage, bush telegraph, catheter, channel, coming, conduit,
      confidential information, connection, contact, conveyor, cooking,
      drainpipe, duct, efflux tube, fire hose, flue pipe, flume, funnel,
      garden hose, gas pipe, grapevine, grapevine telegraph, hose,
      hosepipe, imminent, in the offing, in the works, inside dope,
      inside information, insider, line, main, nipple, on the way,
      organ pipe, origin, passage, pipe, pipette, piping,
      put through channels, ready, reed, reed pipe, siamese,
      siamese connection, siphon, snorkel, soil pipe, source, standpipe,
      steam pipe, stem, straw, supplier, tap, the lowdown, tube, tubing,
      tubulation, tubule, tubulet, tubulure, under way, waste pipe,
      water pipe, wellspring

    

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