3 research outputs found
Circuit design and analysis for on-FPGA communication systems
On-chip communication system has emerged as a prominently important subject in Very-Large-
Scale-Integration (VLSI) design, as the trend of technology scaling favours logics more than interconnects.
Interconnects often dictates the system performance, and, therefore, research for new
methodologies and system architectures that deliver high-performance communication services
across the chip is mandatory. The interconnect challenge is exacerbated in Field-Programmable
Gate Array (FPGA), as a type of ASIC where the hardware can be programmed post-fabrication.
Communication across an FPGA will be deteriorating as a result of interconnect scaling. The programmable
fabrics, switches and the specific routing architecture also introduce additional latency
and bandwidth degradation further hindering intra-chip communication performance.
Past research efforts mainly focused on optimizing logic elements and functional units in FPGAs.
Communication with programmable interconnect received little attention and is inadequately understood.
This thesis is among the first to research on-chip communication systems that are built on
top of programmable fabrics and proposes methodologies to maximize the interconnect throughput
performance. There are three major contributions in this thesis: (i) an analysis of on-chip
interconnect fringing, which degrades the bandwidth of communication channels due to routing
congestions in reconfigurable architectures; (ii) a new analogue wave signalling scheme that significantly
improves the interconnect throughput by exploiting the fundamental electrical characteristics
of the reconfigurable interconnect structures. This new scheme can potentially mitigate
the interconnect scaling challenges. (iii) a novel Dynamic Programming (DP)-network to provide
adaptive routing in network-on-chip (NoC) systems. The DP-network architecture performs runtime
optimization for route planning and dynamic routing which, effectively utilizes the in-silicon
bandwidth. This thesis explores a new horizon in reconfigurable system design, in which new
methodologies and concepts are proposed to enhance the on-FPGA communication throughput
performance that is of vital importance in new technology processes
Optimising and evaluating designs for reconfigurable hardware
Growing demand for computational performance, and the rising cost for chip design and
manufacturing make reconfigurable hardware increasingly attractive for digital system implementation.
Reconfigurable hardware, such as field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs),
can deliver performance through parallelism while also providing flexibility to enable
application builders to reconfigure them. However, reconfigurable systems, particularly
those involving run-time reconfiguration, are often developed in an ad-hoc manner. Such
an approach usually results in low designer productivity and can lead to inefficient designs.
This thesis covers three main achievements that address this situation. The first
achievement is a model that captures design parameters of reconfigurable hardware and
performance parameters of a given application domain. This model supports optimisations
for several design metrics such as performance, area, and power consumption. The second
achievement is a technique that enhances the relocatability of bitstreams for reconfigurable
devices, taking into account heterogeneous resources. This method increases the flexibility
of modules represented by these bitstreams while reducing configuration storage size and
design compilation time. The third achievement is a technique to characterise the power
consumption of FPGAs in different activity modes. This technique includes the evaluation
of standby power and dedicated low-power modes, which are crucial in meeting the
requirements for battery-based mobile devices