587 research outputs found

    Reconfigurable Instruction Cell Architecture Reconfiguration and Interconnects

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    On the Use of Directed Moves for Placement in VLSI CAD

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    Search-based placement methods have long been used for placing integrated circuits targeting the field programmable gate array (FPGA) and standard cell design styles. Such methods offer the potential for high-quality solutions but often come at the cost of long run-times compared to alternative methods. This dissertation examines strategies for enhancing local search heuristics---and in particular, simulated annealing---through the application of directed moves. These moves help to guide a search-based optimizer by focusing efforts on states which are most likely to yield productive improvement, effectively pruning the size of the search space. The engineering theory and implementation details of directed moves are discussed in the context of both field programmable gate array and standard cell designs. This work explores the ways in which such moves can be used to improve the quality of FPGA placements, improve the robustness of floorplan repair and legalization methods for mixed-size standard cell designs, and enhance the quality of detailed placement for standard cell circuits. The analysis presented herein confirms the validity and efficacy of directed moves, and supports the use of such heuristics within various optimization frameworks

    Desynchronization: Synthesis of asynchronous circuits from synchronous specifications

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    Asynchronous implementation techniques, which measure logic delays at run time and activate registers accordingly, are inherently more robust than their synchronous counterparts, which estimate worst-case delays at design time, and constrain the clock cycle accordingly. De-synchronization is a new paradigm to automate the design of asynchronous circuits from synchronous specifications, thus permitting widespread adoption of asynchronicity, without requiring special design skills or tools. In this paper, we first of all study different protocols for de-synchronization and formally prove their correctness, using techniques originally developed for distributed deployment of synchronous language specifications. We also provide a taxonomy of existing protocols for asynchronous latch controllers, covering in particular the four-phase handshake protocols devised in the literature for micro-pipelines. We then propose a new controller which exhibits provably maximal concurrency, and analyze the performance of desynchronized circuits with respect to the original synchronous optimized implementation. We finally prove the feasibility and effectiveness of our approach, by showing its application to a set of real designs, including a complete implementation of the DLX microprocessor architectur

    Proximity Optimization for Adaptive Circuit Design

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    The performance growth of conventional VLSI circuits is seriously hampered by various variation effects and the fundamental limit of chip power density. Adaptive circuit design is recognized as a power-efficient approach to tackling the variation challenge. However, it tends to entail large area overhead if not carefully designed. This work studies how to reduce the overhead by forming adaptivity blocks considering both timing and physical proximity among logic cells. The proximity optimization consists of timing and location aware cell clustering and incremental placement enforcing the clusters. Experiments are performed on the ICCAD 2014 benchmark circuits, which include case of near one million cells. The experiment results prove that during clustering, location proximity among logic cells are equally important as the timing proximity among logic cells. Compared to alternative methods, our approach achieves 25% to 75% area overhead reduction with an average of 0:6% wirelength overhead, while retains about the same timing yield and power consumption

    Custom Cell Placement Automation for Asynchronous VLSI

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    Asynchronous Very-Large-Scale-Integration (VLSI) integrated circuits have demonstrated many advantages over their synchronous counterparts, including low power consumption, elastic pipelining, robustness against manufacturing and temperature variations, etc. However, the lack of dedicated electronic design automation (EDA) tools, especially physical layout automation tools, largely limits the adoption of asynchronous circuits. Existing commercial placement tools are optimized for synchronous circuits, and require a standard cell library provided by semiconductor foundries to complete the physical design. The physical layouts of cells in this library have the same height to simplify the placement problem and the power distribution network. Although the standard cell methodology also works for asynchronous designs, the performance is inferior compared with counterparts designed using the full-custom design methodology. To tackle this challenge, we propose a gridded cell layout methodology for asynchronous circuits, in which the cell height and cell width can be any integer multiple of two grid values. The gridded cell approach combines the shape regularity of standard cells with the size flexibility of full-custom layouts. Therefore, this approach can achieve a better space utilization ratio and lower wire length for asynchronous designs. Experiments have shown that the gridded cell placement approach reduces area without impacting the routability. We have also used this placer to tape out a chip in a 65nm process technology, demonstrating that our placer generates design-rule clean results
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