4,293 research outputs found
An empirical evaluation of High-Level Synthesis languages and tools for database acceleration
High Level Synthesis (HLS) languages and tools are emerging as the most promising technique to make FPGAs more accessible to software developers. Nevertheless, picking the most suitable HLS for a certain class of algorithms depends on requirements such as area and throughput, as well as on programmer experience. In this paper, we explore the different trade-offs present when using a representative set of HLS tools in the context of Database Management Systems (DBMS) acceleration. More specifically, we conduct an empirical analysis of four representative frameworks (Bluespec SystemVerilog, Altera OpenCL, LegUp and Chisel) that we utilize to accelerate commonly-used database algorithms such as sorting, the median operator, and hash joins. Through our implementation experience and empirical results for database acceleration, we conclude that the selection of the most suitable HLS depends on a set of orthogonal characteristics, which we highlight for each HLS framework.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author’s final draft
Performance comparison of single-precision SPICE Model-Evaluation on FPGA, GPU, Cell, and multi-core processors
Automated code generation and performance tuning techniques for concurrent architectures such as GPUs, Cell and FPGAs can provide integer factor speedups over multi-core processor organizations for data-parallel, floating-point computation in SPICE model-evaluation. Our Verilog AMS compiler produces code for parallel evaluation of non-linear circuit models suitable for use in SPICE simulations where the same model is evaluated several times for all the devices in the circuit. Our compiler uses architecture specific parallelization strategies (OpenMP for multi-core, PThreads for Cell, CUDA for GPU, statically scheduled VLIW for FPGA) when producing code for these different architectures. We automatically explore different implementation configurations (e.g. unroll factor, vector length) using our performance-tuner to identify the best possible configuration for each architecture. We demonstrate speedups of 3- 182times for a Xilinx Virtex5 LX 330T, 1.3-33times for an IBM Cell, and 3-131times for an NVIDIA 9600 GT GPU over a 3 GHz Intel Xeon 5160 implementation for a variety of single-precision device models
Auto-Generation of Pipelined Hardware Designs for Polar Encoder
This paper presents a general framework for auto-generation of pipelined
polar encoder architectures. The proposed framework could be well represented
by a general formula. Given arbitrary code length and the level of
parallelism , the formula could specify the corresponding hardware
architecture. We have written a compiler which could read the formula and then
automatically generate its register-transfer level (RTL) description suitable
for FPGA or ASIC implementation. With this hardware generation system, one
could explore the design space and make a trade-off between cost and
performance. Our experimental results have demonstrated the efficiency of this
auto-generator for polar encoder architectures
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