Nowadays, computers are frequently equipped with peripherals that transfer great
amounts of data between them and the system memory using direct memory access
techniques (i.e., digital cameras, high speed networks, . . . ). Those peripherals prevent the
processor from accessing system memory for significant periods of time (i.e., while they
are communicating with system memory in order to send or receive data blocks). In this
paper we study the negative effects that I/O operations from computer peripherals have on
processor performance. With the help of a set of routines (SMPL) used to make discrete
event simulators, we have developed a configurable software that simulates a computer
processor and main memory as well as the I/O scenarios where the periph-erals operate.
This software has been used to analyze the performance of four different processors in four
I/O scenarios: video capture, video capture and playback, high speed network, and serial
transmission