7,321 research outputs found

    Portability, compatibility and reuse of MAC protocols across different IoT radio platforms

    Get PDF
    To cope with the diversity of Internet of Things (loT) requirements, a large number of Medium Access Control (MAC) protocols have been proposed in scientific literature, many of which are designed for specific application domains. However, for most of these MAC protocols, no multi-platform software implementation is available. In fact, the path from conceptual MAC protocol proposed in theoretical papers, towards an actual working implementation is rife with pitfalls. (i) A first problem is the timing bugs, frequently encountered in MAC implementations. (ii) Furthermore, once implemented, many MAC protocols are strongly optimized for specific hardware, thereby limiting the potential of software reuse or modifications. (iii) Finally, in real-life conditions, the performance of the MAC protocol varies strongly depending on the actual underlying radio chip. As a result, the same MAC protocol implementation acts differently per platform, resulting in unpredictable/asymmetrical behavior when multiple platforms are combined in the same network. This paper describes in detail the challenges related to multi-platform MAC development, and experimentally quantifies how the above issues impact the MAC protocol performance when running MAC protocols on multiple radio chips. Finally, an overall methodology is proposed to avoid the previously mentioned cross-platform compatibility issues. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

    Tree-structured small-world connected wireless network-on-chip with adaptive routing

    Get PDF
    Traditional Network-on-Chip (NoC) systems comprised of many cores suffer from debilitating bottlenecks of latency and significant power dissipation due to the overhead inherent in multi-hop communication. In addition, these systems remain vulnerable to malicious circuitry incorporated into the design by untrustworthy vendors in a world where complex multi-stage design and manufacturing processes require the collective specialized services of a variety of contractors. This thesis proposes a novel small-world tree-based network-on-chip (SWTNoC) structure designed for high throughput, acceptable energy consumption, and resiliency to attacks and node failures resulting from the insertion of hardware Trojans. This tree-based implementation was devised as a means of reducing average network hop count, providing a large degree of local connectivity, and effective long-range connectivity by means of a novel wireless link approach based on carbon nanotube (CNT) antenna design. Network resiliency is achieved by means of a devised adaptive routing algorithm implemented to work with TRAIN (Tree-based Routing Architecture for Irregular Networks). Comparisons are drawn with benchmark architectures with optimized wireless link placement by means of the simulated annealing (SA) metaheuristic. Experimental results demonstrate a 21% throughput improvement and a 23% reduction in dissipated energy per packet over the closest competing architecture. Similar trends are observed at increasing system sizes. In addition, the SWTNoC maintains this throughput and energy advantage in the presence of a fault introduced into the system. By designing a hierarchical topology and designating a higher level of importance on a subset of the nodes, much higher network throughput can be attained while simultaneously guaranteeing deadlock freedom as well as a high degree of resiliency and fault-tolerance

    The Design of a System Architecture for Mobile Multimedia Computers

    Get PDF
    This chapter discusses the system architecture of a portable computer, called Mobile Digital Companion, which provides support for handling multimedia applications energy efficiently. Because battery life is limited and battery weight is an important factor for the size and the weight of the Mobile Digital Companion, energy management plays a crucial role in the architecture. As the Companion must remain usable in a variety of environments, it has to be flexible and adaptable to various operating conditions. The Mobile Digital Companion has an unconventional architecture that saves energy by using system decomposition at different levels of the architecture and exploits locality of reference with dedicated, optimised modules. The approach is based on dedicated functionality and the extensive use of energy reduction techniques at all levels of system design. The system has an architecture with a general-purpose processor accompanied by a set of heterogeneous autonomous programmable modules, each providing an energy efficient implementation of dedicated tasks. A reconfigurable internal communication network switch exploits locality of reference and eliminates wasteful data copies

    Temperature Evaluation of NoC Architectures and Dynamically Reconfigurable NoC

    Get PDF
    Advancements in the field of chip fabrication led to the integration of a large number of transistors in a small area, giving rise to the multi–core processor era. Massive multi–core processors facilitate innovation and research in the field of healthcare, defense, entertainment, meteorology and many others. Reduction in chip area and increase in the number of on–chip cores is accompanied by power and temperature issues. In high performance multi–core chips, power and heat are predominant constraints. High performance massive multicore systems suffer from thermal hotspots, exacerbating the problem of reliability in deep submicron technologies. High power consumption not only increases the chip temperature but also jeopardizes the integrity of the system. Hence, there is a need to explore holistic power and thermal optimization and management strategies for massive on–chip multi–core environments. In multi–core environments, the communication fabric plays a major role in deciding the efficiency of the system. In multi–core processor chips this communication infrastructure is predominantly a Network–on–Chip (NoC). Tradition NoC designs incorporate planar interconnects as a result these NoCs have long, multi–hop wireline links for data exchange. Due to the presence of multi–hop planar links such NoC architectures fall prey to high latency, significant power dissipation and temperature hotspots. Networks inspired from nature are envisioned as an enabling technology to achieve highly efficient and low power NoC designs. Adopting wireless technology in such architectures enhance their performance. Placement of wireless interconnects (WIs) alters the behavior of the network and hence a random deployment of WIs may not result in a thermally optimal solution. In such scenarios, the WIs being highly efficient would attract high traffic densities resulting in thermal hotspots. Hence, the location and utilization of the wireless links is a key factor in obtaining a thermal optimal highly efficient Network–on–chip. Optimization of the NoC framework alone is incapable of addressing the effects due to the runtime dynamics of the system. Minimal paths solely optimized for performance in the network may lead to excessive utilization of certain NoC components leading to thermal hotspots. Hence, architectural innovation in conjunction with suitable power and thermal management strategies is the key for designing high performance and energy–efficient multicore systems. This work contributes at exploring various wired and wireless NoC architectures that achieve best trade–offs between temperature, performance and energy–efficiency. It further proposes an adaptive routing scheme which factors in the thermal profile of the chip. The proposed routing mechanism dynamically reacts to the thermal profile of the chip and takes measures to avoid thermal hotspots, achieving a thermally efficient dynamically reconfigurable network on chip architecture
    • …
    corecore