Since the instruction memory only reads, we treat it as combinational logic: the output at any time reflects the contents of the location specified by the address input, and no read control signal is needed. |
There are separate read and write controls, although only one of these may be asserted on any given clock. The memory unit needs a read signal, since, unlike the register file, reading the value of an invalid address can cause problems. The control lines, memory read and memory write in this case, are in blue color. |
The program counter is a 32-bit register that holds the address of the current instruction. It is written at the end of every clock cycle and thus does not need a write control signal. |