1,551 research outputs found

    Using reconfigurable computing technology to accelerate matrix decomposition and applications

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    Matrix decomposition plays an increasingly significant role in many scientific and engineering applications. Among numerous techniques, Singular Value Decomposition (SVD) and Eigenvalue Decomposition (EVD) are widely used as factorization tools to perform Principal Component Analysis for dimensionality reduction and pattern recognition in image processing, text mining and wireless communications, while QR Decomposition (QRD) and sparse LU Decomposition (LUD) are employed to solve the dense or sparse linear system of equations in bioinformatics, power system and computer vision. Matrix decompositions are computationally expensive and their sequential implementations often fail to meet the requirements of many time-sensitive applications. The emergence of reconfigurable computing has provided a flexible and low-cost opportunity to pursue high-performance parallel designs, and the use of FPGAs has shown promise in accelerating this class of computation. In this research, we have proposed and implemented several highly parallel FPGA-based architectures to accelerate matrix decompositions and their applications in data mining and signal processing. Specifically, in this dissertation we describe the following contributions: • We propose an efficient FPGA-based double-precision floating-point architecture for EVD, which can efficiently analyze large-scale matrices. • We implement a floating-point Hestenes-Jacobi architecture for SVD, which is capable of analyzing arbitrary sized matrices. • We introduce a novel deeply pipelined reconfigurable architecture for QRD, which can be dynamically configured to perform either Householder transformation or Givens rotation in a manner that takes advantage of the strengths of each. • We design a configurable architecture for sparse LUD that supports both symmetric and asymmetric sparse matrices with arbitrary sparsity patterns. • By further extending the proposed hardware solution for SVD, we parallelize a popular text mining tool-Latent Semantic Indexing with an FPGA-based architecture. • We present a configurable architecture to accelerate Homotopy l1-minimization, in which the modification of the proposed FPGA architecture for sparse LUD is used at its core to parallelize both Cholesky decomposition and rank-1 update. Our experimental results using an FPGA-based acceleration system indicate the efficiency of our proposed novel architectures, with application and dimension-dependent speedups over an optimized software implementation that range from 1.5ÃÂ to 43.6ÃÂ in terms of computation time

    Turbo Bayesian Compressed Sensing

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    Compressed sensing (CS) theory specifies a new signal acquisition approach, potentially allowing the acquisition of signals at a much lower data rate than the Nyquist sampling rate. In CS, the signal is not directly acquired but reconstructed from a few measurements. One of the key problems in CS is how to recover the original signal from measurements in the presence of noise. This dissertation addresses signal reconstruction problems in CS. First, a feedback structure and signal recovery algorithm, orthogonal pruning pursuit (OPP), is proposed to exploit the prior knowledge to reconstruct the signal in the noise-free situation. To handle the noise, a noise-aware signal reconstruction algorithm based on Bayesian Compressed Sensing (BCS) is developed. Moreover, a novel Turbo Bayesian Compressed Sensing (TBCS) algorithm is developed for joint signal reconstruction by exploiting both spatial and temporal redundancy. Then, the TBCS algorithm is applied to a UWB positioning system for achieving mm-accuracy with low sampling rate ADCs. Finally, hardware implementation of BCS signal reconstruction on FPGAs and GPUs is investigated. Implementation on GPUs and FPGAs of parallel Cholesky decomposition, which is a key component of BCS, is explored. Simulation results on software and hardware have demonstrated that OPP and TBCS outperform previous approaches, with UWB positioning accuracy improved by 12.8x. The accelerated computation helps enable real-time application of this work

    VLSI Architecture for Polar Codes Using Fast Fourier Transform-Like Design

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    Polar code is a novel and high-performance communication algorithm with the ability to theoretically achieving the Shannon limit, which has attracted increasing attention recently due to its low encoding and decoding complexity. Hardware optimization further reduces the cost and achieves better timing performance enabling real-time applications on resource-constrained devices. This thesis presents an area-efficient architecture for a successive cancellation (SC) polar decoder. Our design applies high-level transformations to reduce the number of Processing Elements (PEs), i.e., only log2 N pre-computed PEs are required in our architecture for an N-bit code. We also propose a customized loop-based shifting register to reduce the consumption of the delay elements further. Our experimental results demonstrate that our architecture reduces 98.90% and 93.38% in the area and area-time product, respectively, compared to prior works

    BriskStream: Scaling Data Stream Processing on Shared-Memory Multicore Architectures

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    We introduce BriskStream, an in-memory data stream processing system (DSPSs) specifically designed for modern shared-memory multicore architectures. BriskStream's key contribution is an execution plan optimization paradigm, namely RLAS, which takes relative-location (i.e., NUMA distance) of each pair of producer-consumer operators into consideration. We propose a branch and bound based approach with three heuristics to resolve the resulting nontrivial optimization problem. The experimental evaluations demonstrate that BriskStream yields much higher throughput and better scalability than existing DSPSs on multi-core architectures when processing different types of workloads.Comment: To appear in SIGMOD'1

    Circuit design and analysis for on-FPGA communication systems

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    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

    Hardware acceleration for power efficient deep packet inspection

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    The rapid growth of the Internet leads to a massive spread of malicious attacks like viruses and malwares, making the safety of online activity a major concern. The use of Network Intrusion Detection Systems (NIDS) is an effective method to safeguard the Internet. One key procedure in NIDS is Deep Packet Inspection (DPI). DPI can examine the contents of a packet and take actions on the packets based on predefined rules. In this thesis, DPI is mainly discussed in the context of security applications. However, DPI can also be used for bandwidth management and network surveillance. DPI inspects the whole packet payload, and due to this and the complexity of the inspection rules, DPI algorithms consume significant amounts of resources including time, memory and energy. The aim of this thesis is to design hardware accelerated methods for memory and energy efficient high-speed DPI. The patterns in packet payloads, especially complex patterns, can be efficiently represented by regular expressions, which can be translated by the use of Deterministic Finite Automata (DFA). DFA algorithms are fast but consume very large amounts of memory with certain kinds of regular expressions. In this thesis, memory efficient algorithms are proposed based on the transition compressions of the DFAs. In this work, Bloom filters are used to implement DPI on an FPGA for hardware acceleration with the design of a parallel architecture. Furthermore, devoted at a balance of power and performance, an energy efficient adaptive Bloom filter is designed with the capability of adjusting the number of active hash functions according to current workload. In addition, a method is given for implementation on both two-stage and multi-stage platforms. Nevertheless, false positive rates still prevents the Bloom filter from extensive utilization; a cache-based counting Bloom filter is presented in this work to get rid of the false positives for fast and precise matching. Finally, in future work, in order to estimate the effect of power savings, models will be built for routers and DPI, which will also analyze the latency impact of dynamic frequency adaption to current traffic. Besides, a low power DPI system will be designed with a single or multiple DPI engines. Results and evaluation of the low power DPI model and system will be produced in future

    Advanced analytics through FPGA based query processing and deep reinforcement learning

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    Today, vast streams of structured and unstructured data have been incorporated in databases, and analytical processes are applied to discover patterns, correlations, trends and other useful relationships that help to take part in a broad range of decision-making processes. The amount of generated data has grown very large over the years, and conventional database processing methods from previous generations have not been sufficient to provide satisfactory results regarding analytics performance and prediction accuracy metrics. Thus, new methods are needed in a wide array of fields from computer architectures, storage systems, network design to statistics and physics. This thesis proposes two methods to address the current challenges and meet the future demands of advanced analytics. First, we present AxleDB, a Field Programmable Gate Array based query processing system which constitutes the frontend of an advanced analytics system. AxleDB melds highly-efficient accelerators with memory, storage and provides a unified programmable environment. AxleDB is capable of offloading complex Structured Query Language queries from host CPU. The experiments have shown that running a set of TPC-H queries, AxleDB can perform full queries between 1.8x and 34.2x faster and 2.8x to 62.1x more energy efficient compared to MonetDB, and PostgreSQL on a single workstation node. Second, we introduce TauRieL, a novel deep reinforcement learning (DRL) based method for combinatorial problems. The design idea behind combining DRL and combinatorial problems is to apply the prediction capabilities of deep reinforcement learning and to use the universality of combinatorial optimization problems to explore general purpose predictive methods. TauRieL utilizes an actor-critic inspired DRL architecture that adopts ordinary feedforward nets. Furthermore, TauRieL performs online training which unifies training and state space exploration. The experiments show that TauRieL can generate solutions two orders of magnitude faster and performs within 3% of accuracy compared to the state-of-the-art DRL on the Traveling Salesman Problem while searching for the shortest tour. Also, we present that TauRieL can be adapted to the Knapsack combinatorial problem. With a very minimal problem specific modification, TauRieL can outperform a Knapsack specific greedy heuristics.Hoy en día, se han incorporado grandes cantidades de datos estructurados y no estructurados en las bases de datos, y se les aplican procesos analíticos para descubrir patrones, correlaciones, tendencias y otras relaciones útiles que se utilizan mayormente para la toma de decisiones. La cantidad de datos generados ha crecido enormemente a lo largo de los años, y los métodos de procesamiento de bases de datos convencionales utilizados en las generaciones anteriores no son suficientes para proporcionar resultados satisfactorios respecto al rendimiento del análisis y respecto de la precisión de las predicciones. Por lo tanto, se necesitan nuevos métodos en una amplia gama de campos, desde arquitecturas de computadoras, sistemas de almacenamiento, diseño de redes hasta estadísticas y física. Esta tesis propone dos métodos para abordar los desafíos actuales y satisfacer las demandas futuras de análisis avanzado. Primero, presentamos AxleDB, un sistema de procesamiento de consultas basado en FPGAs (Field Programmable Gate Array) que constituye la interfaz de un sistema de análisis avanzado. AxleDB combina aceleradores altamente eficientes con memoria, almacenamiento y proporciona un entorno programable unificado. AxleDB es capaz de descargar consultas complejas de lenguaje de consulta estructurado desde la CPU del host. Los experimentos han demostrado que al ejecutar un conjunto de consultas TPC-H, AxleDB puede realizar consultas completas entre 1.8x y 34.2x más rápido y 2.8x a 62.1x más eficiente energéticamente que MonetDB, y PostgreSQL en un solo nodo de una estación de trabajo. En segundo lugar, presentamos TauRieL, un nuevo método basado en Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) para problemas combinatorios. La idea central que está detrás de la combinación de DRL y problemas combinatorios, es aplicar las capacidades de predicción del aprendizaje de refuerzo profundo y el uso de la universalidad de los problemas de optimización combinatoria para explorar métodos predictivos de propósito general. TauRieL utiliza una arquitectura DRL inspirada en el actor-crítico que se adapta a redes feedforward. Además, TauRieL realiza el entrenamieton en línea que unifica el entrenamiento y la exploración espacial de los estados. Los experimentos muestran que TauRieL puede generar soluciones dos órdenes de magnitud más rápido y funciona con un 3% de precisión en comparación con el estado del arte en DRL aplicado al problema del viajante mientras busca el recorrido más corto. Además, presentamos que TauRieL puede adaptarse al problema de la Mochila. Con una modificación específica muy mínima del problema, TauRieL puede superar a una heurística codiciosa de Knapsack Problem.Postprint (published version
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