7 research outputs found

    Semantics-preserving cosynthesis of cyber-physical systems

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    Communication synthesis of networks-on-chip (NoC)

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    The emergence of networks-on-chip (NoC) as the communication infrastructure solution for complex multi-core SoCs presents communication synthesis challenges. This dissertation addresses the design and run-time management aspects of communication synthesis. Design reuse and the infeasibility of Intellectual Property (IP) core interface redesign, requires the development of a Core-Network Interface (CNI) which allows them to communicate over the on-chip network. The absence of intelligence amongst the NoC components, entails the introduction of a CNI capable of not only providing basic packetization and depacketization, but also other essential services such as reliability, power management, reconguration and test support. A generic CNI architecture providing these services for NoCs is proposed and evaluated in this dissertation. Rising on-chip communication power costs and reliability concerns due to these, motivate the development of a peak power management technique that is both scalable to dierent NoCs and adaptable to varying trac congurations. A scalable and adaptable peak power management technique - SAPP - is proposed and demonstrated. Latency and throughput improvements observed with SAPP demonstrate its superiority over existing techniques. Increasing design complexity make prediction of design lifetimes dicult. Post SoC deployment, an on-line health monitoring scheme, is essential to maintain con- dence in the correct operation of on-chip cores. The rising design complexity and IP core test costs makes non-concurrent testing of the IP cores infeasible. An on-line scheme capable of managing IP core test in the presence of executing applications is essential. Such a scheme ensures application performance and system power budgets are eciently managed. This dissertation proposes Concurrent On-Line Test (COLT) for NoC-based systems and demonstrates how a robust implementation of COLT using a Test Infrastructure-IP (TI-IP) can be used to maintain condence in the correct operation of the SoC

    Parametric Yield of VLSI Systems under Variability: Analysis and Design Solutions

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    Variability has become one of the vital challenges that the designers of integrated circuits encounter. variability becomes increasingly important. Imperfect manufacturing process manifest itself as variations in the design parameters. These variations and those in the operating environment of VLSI circuits result in unexpected changes in the timing, power, and reliability of the circuits. With scaling transistor dimensions, process and environmental variations become significantly important in the modern VLSI design. A smaller feature size means that the physical characteristics of a device are more prone to these unaccounted-for changes. To achieve a robust design, the random and systematic fluctuations in the manufacturing process and the variations in the environmental parameters should be analyzed and the impact on the parametric yield should be addressed. This thesis studies the challenges and comprises solutions for designing robust VLSI systems in the presence of variations. Initially, to get some insight into the system design under variability, the parametric yield is examined for a small circuit. Understanding the impact of variations on the yield at the circuit level is vital to accurately estimate and optimize the yield at the system granularity. Motivated by the observations and results, found at the circuit level, statistical analyses are performed, and solutions are proposed, at the system level of abstraction, to reduce the impact of the variations and increase the parametric yield. At the circuit level, the impact of the supply and threshold voltage variations on the parametric yield is discussed. Here, a design centering methodology is proposed to maximize the parametric yield and optimize the power-performance trade-off under variations. In addition, the scaling trend in the yield loss is studied. Also, some considerations for design centering in the current and future CMOS technologies are explored. The investigation, at the circuit level, suggests that the operating temperature significantly affects the parametric yield. In addition, the yield is very sensitive to the magnitude of the variations in supply and threshold voltage. Therefore, the spatial variations in process and environmental variations make it necessary to analyze the yield at a higher granularity. Here, temperature and voltage variations are mapped across the chip to accurately estimate the yield loss at the system level. At the system level, initially the impact of process-induced temperature variations on the power grid design is analyzed. Also, an efficient verification method is provided that ensures the robustness of the power grid in the presence of variations. Then, a statistical analysis of the timing yield is conducted, by taking into account both the process and environmental variations. By considering the statistical profile of the temperature and supply voltage, the process variations are mapped to the delay variations across a die. This ensures an accurate estimation of the timing yield. In addition, a method is proposed to accurately estimate the power yield considering process-induced temperature and supply voltage variations. This helps check the robustness of the circuits early in the design process. Lastly, design solutions are presented to reduce the power consumption and increase the timing yield under the variations. In the first solution, a guideline for floorplaning optimization in the presence of temperature variations is offered. Non-uniformity in the thermal profiles of integrated circuits is an issue that impacts the parametric yield and threatens chip reliability. Therefore, the correlation between the total power consumption and the temperature variations across a chip is examined. As a result, floorplanning guidelines are proposed that uses the correlation to efficiently optimize the chip's total power and takes into account the thermal uniformity. The second design solution provides an optimization methodology for assigning the power supply pads across the chip for maximizing the timing yield. A mixed-integer nonlinear programming (MINLP) optimization problem, subject to voltage drop and current constraint, is efficiently solved to find the optimum number and location of the pads

    Embedded Machine-Learning For Variable-Rate Fertiliser Systems: A Model-Driven Approach To Precision Agriculture

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    Efficient use of fertilisers, in particular the use of Nitrogen (N), is one of the rate-limiting factors in meeting global food production requirements. While N is a key driver in increasing crop yields, overuse can also lead to negative environmental and health impacts. It has been suggested that Variable-Rate Fertiliser (VRF) techniques may help to reduce excessive N applications. VRF seeks to spatially vary fertiliser input based on estimated crop requirements, however a major challenge in the operational deployment of VRF systems is the automated processing of large amounts of sensor data in real-time. Machine Learning (ML) algorithms have shown promise in their ability to process these large, high-velocity data streams, and to produce accurate predictions. The newly developed Fuzzy Boxes (FB) algorithm has been designed with VRF applications in mind, however no publicly available software implementation currently exists. Therefore, development of a prototype implementation of FB forms a component of this work. This thesis will also employ a Hardware-in-the-Loop (HWIL) testing methodology using a potential target device in order to simulate a real-world VRF deployment environment. By using this environment simulation, two existing ML algorithms (Artificial Neural Network (ANN) and Support Vector Machine (SVM)) can be compared against the prototype implementation of FB for applicability to VRF applications. It will be shown that all tested algorithms could potentially be suitable for high-speed VRF when measured on prediction time and various accuracy metrics. All algorithms achieved higher than 84.5% accuracy, with FB20 reaching 87.21%. Prediction times were highly varied; the fastest average predictor was an ANN (16.64μs), while the slowest was FB20(502.77μs). All average prediction times were fast enough to achieve a spatial resolution of 31 mm when operating at 60 m/s, making all tested algorithms fast enough predictors for VRF applications

    SoCRocket - A flexible and extensible Virtual Platform for the development of robust Embedded Systems

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    Der Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit liegt in der Erhöhung des Abstraktionsniveaus im Entwurfsprozess, speziell dem Entwurf von Systemen auf Basis von Virtuellen Plattformen (VPs), Transaction-Level-Modellierung (TLM) und SystemC. Es wird eine ganzheitliche Methode vorgestellt, mit der komplexe eingebettete Systeme effizient modelliert werden können. Ergebnis ist eine der RTL-Synthese nahezu gleichgestellte Genauigkeit bei wesentlich höherer Flexibilität und Simulationsgeschwindigkeit. Das SoCRocket-System orientiert sich dazu an existierenden Standards und stellt Methoden zu deren effizientem Einsatz zur Verbesserung von Simulationsgeschwindigkeit und Simulationsgenauigkeit vor. So wird unter anderem gezeigt, wie moderne Multi-Kanal-Protokolle mit Split-Transfers durch Ausgleich des Intertransaktions-Timings ohne die Einführung zusätzlicher Protokollphasen zeitlich genau modelliert werden können. Standardisierungslücken in den Bereichen Speichermodellierung und Systemkonfiguration werden durch standardoffene Lösungen geschlossen. Darüber hinaus wird neue Infrastruktur zur Modellierung von Signalkommunikation auf Transaktionsebene, der Verifikation von Komponenten und der Modellierung des Energieverbrauchs vorgestellt. Zur Demonstration wurden die Kernkomponenten einer im europäischen Raumfahrtsektor maßgeblichen Hardwarebibliothek modelliert. Alle Komponenten wurden zunächst in Unit-Tests verifiziert und anschließend in einem Systemprototypen integriert. Zur Verifikation der Funktion, sowie Bestimmung von Simulationsgeschwindigkeit und zeitlicher Genauigkeit, wurde dieser für unterschiedliche Abstraktionsstufen konfiguriert und mit einem in VHDL beschriebenen RISC-Referenzentwurf (LEON3MP) verglichen. Das System mit losem Timing (LT) und blockierender Kommunikation ist im Durchschnitt 561-mal schneller als die RTL-Referenz und weist eine durchschnittliche Timing-Abweichung von 7,04% auf. Das System mit näherungsweise akkuratem Timing (AT) und nicht-blockierender Kommunikation ist 335-mal schneller. Die durchschnittliche Timing-Abweichung beträgt hier nur noch 3,03%, was einer Standardabweichung von 0.033 und damit einer sehr hohen statistischen Sicherheit entspricht. Die verschiedenen Abstraktionsniveaus können zur Realisierung mehrstufiger Architekturexplorationen eingesetzt werden. Dies wird am Beispiel einer hyperspektralen Bildkompression verdeutlicht.The focus of this work is raising the abstraction level in the development process, especially for the design of systems based on Virtual Platforms (VPs), Transaction Level Modeling (TLM), and SystemC. A holistic method for efficient modeling of complex embedded systems is presented. Results are accuracies close to RTL synthesis but at much higher flexibility, and simulation performance. The SoCRocket system integrates existing standards and introduces new methods for improvement of simulation performance and accuracy. It is shown, amongst others, how modern multi-channel protocols with split transfers can be accurately modeled by compensating inter-transaction timing without introducing additional protocol phases. Standardization gaps in the area of memory modeling and system configuration are closed by standard-open solutions. Furthermore, new infrastructure for modeling signal communication on transaction level, verification of components, and estimating power consumption are presented. All components have been verified in unit tests and were subsequently integrated in a system prototype. For functional verification, as well as measurement of simulation performance and accuracy, the prototype was configured for different abstractions and compared to a VHDL-based RISC reference design (LEON3MP). The loosely-timed platform prototype with blocking communication (LT) is in average 561 times faster than the RTL reference and shows an average timing deviation of 7,04%. The approximately-timed system (AT) with non-blocking communication is 335 times faster. Here, the timing deviation is only 3,03 %, corresponding to a standard deviation of 0.033, proving a very high statistic certainty. The system’s various abstraction levels can be exploited by a multi-stage architecture exploration. This is demonstrated by the example of a hyperspectral image compression

    A System-Level Cosynthesis Framework for Power Delivery and On-Chip Data Networks in Application-Specific 3-D ICs

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    Texas Register

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    A weekly publication, the Texas Register serves as the journal of state agency rulemaking for Texas. Information published in the Texas Register includes proposed, adopted, withdrawn and emergency rule actions, notices of state agency review of agency rules, governor's appointments, attorney general opinions, and miscellaneous documents such as requests for proposals. After adoption, these rulemaking actions are codified into the Texas Administrative Code
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