77 research outputs found
EPICURE: A partitioning and co-design framework for reconfigurable computing
This paper presents a new design methodology able to bridge the gap between an abstract specification and a heterogeneous reconfigurable architecture. The EPICURE contribution is the result of a joint study on abstraction/refinement methods and a smart reconfigurable architecture within the formal Esterel design tools suite. The original points of this work are: (i) a generic HW/SW interface model, (ii) a specification methodology that handles the control, and includes efficient verification and HW/SW synthesis capabilities, (iii) a method for parallelism exploration based on abstract resources/performance estimation expressed in terms of area/delay tradeoffs, (iv) a HW/SW partitioning approach that refines the specification into explicit HW configurations and the associated SW control. The EPICURE framework shows how a cooperation of complementary methodologies and CAD tools associated with a relevant architecture can signficantly improve the designer productivity, especially in the context of reconfigurable architectures
dReDBox: Materializing a full-stack rack-scale system prototype of a next-generation disaggregated datacenter
Current datacenters are based on server machines, whose mainboard and hardware components form the baseline, monolithic building block that the rest of the system software, middleware and application stack are built upon. This leads to the following limitations: (a) resource proportionality of a multi-tray system is bounded by the basic building block (mainboard), (b) resource allocation to processes or virtual machines (VMs) is bounded by the available resources within the boundary of the mainboard, leading to spare resource fragmentation and inefficiencies, and (c) upgrades must be applied to each and every server even when only a specific component needs to be upgraded. The dRedBox project (Disaggregated Recursive Datacentre-in-a-Box) addresses the above limitations, and proposes the next generation, low-power, across form-factor datacenters, departing from the paradigm of the mainboard-as-a-unit and enabling the creation of function-block-as-a-unit. Hardware-level disaggregation and software-defined wiring of resources is supported by a full-fledged Type-1 hypervisor that can execute commodity virtual machines, which communicate over a low-latency and high-throughput software-defined optical network. To evaluate its novel approach, dRedBox will demonstrate application execution in the domains of network functions virtualization, infrastructure analytics, and real-time video surveillance.This work has been supported in part by EU H2020 ICTproject dRedBox, contract #687632.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
An enhanced static-list scheduling algorithm for temporal partitioning onto RPUs
This paper presents a novel algorithm for temporal partitioning of graphs representing a behavioral description. The algorithm is based on an extension of the traditional static-list scheduling that tailors it to resolve both scheduling and temporal partitioning. The nodes to be mapped into a partition are selected based on a statically computed cost model. The cost for each node integrates communication effects, the critical path length, and the possibility of the critical path to hide the delay of parallel nodes. In order to alleviate the runtime there is no dynamic update of the costs. A comparison of the algorithm to other schedulers and with close-to-optimum results obtained with a simulated annealing approach is shown. The presented algorithm has been implemented and the results show that it is robust, effective, and efficient, and when compared to other methods finds very good results in small amounts of CPU time
Secure execution environments through reconfigurable lightweight cryptographic components
Software protection is one of the most important problems in the area of computing as it affects a multitude of players like software vendors, digital content providers, users, and government agencies. There are multiple dimensions to this broad problem of software protection. The most important ones are: (1) protecting software from reverse engineering. (2) protecting software from tamper (or modification). (3) preventing software piracy. (4) verification of integrity of the software;In this thesis we focus on these areas of software protection. The basic requirement to achieve these goals is to provide a secure execution environment, which ensures that the programs behave in the same way as it was designed, and the execution platforms respect certain types of wishes specified by the program;We take the approach of providing secure execution environment through architecture support. We exploit the power of reconfigurable components in achieving this. The first problem we consider is to provide architecture support for obfuscation. This also achieves the goals of tamper resistance, copy protection, and IP protection indirectly. Our approach is based on the intuition that the software is a sequence of instructions (and data) and if the sequence as well the contents are obfuscated then all the required goals can be achieved;The second problem we solve is integrity verification of the software particularly in embedded devices. Our solution is based on the intuition that an obfuscated (permuted) binary image without any dynamic traces reveals very little information about the IP of the program. Moreover, if this obfuscation function becomes a shared secret between the verifier and the embedded device then verification can be performed in a trustworthy manner;Cryptographic components form the underlying building blocks/primitives of any secure execution environment. Our use of reconfigurable components to provide software protection in both Arc 3 D and TIVA led us to an interesting observation about the power of reconfigurable components. Reconfigurable components provide the ability to use the secret (or key) in a much stronger way than the conventional cryptographic designs. This opened up an opportunity for us to explore the use of reconfigurable gates to build cryptographic functions
EPICURE : A Partitioning and CoDesign Framework For Reconfigurable Computing
This paper presents a new global design methodology capable to bridge the gap between an abstract specification level and a heterogeneous reconfigurable architecture level. The Epicure contribution is the result of a joint study on abstraction/refinement methods and a smart reconfigurable architecture within the formal Esterel design tools suite. The original points of this work are : i) a generic HW/SW interface model, ii) a specification methodology that handles the control, includes efficient verification and HW/SW synthesis capabilities, iii) a method for parallelism exploration based on abstract resources/performance estimation expressed in terms of area/delay tradeoffs, iv) a HW/SW partitioning approach that refines the specification into explicit HW configurations and the associated SW control. The Epicure framework shows how a cooperation of complementary methodologies and CAD tools associated with a relevant architecture can significantly improve the designer productivity, especially in the context of reconfigurable architectures
Multi-core architectures with coarse-grained dynamically reconfigurable processors for broadband wireless access technologies
Broadband Wireless Access technologies have significant market potential, especially the
WiMAX protocol which can deliver data rates of tens of Mbps. Strong demand for high
performance WiMAX solutions is forcing designers to seek help from multi-core processors
that offer competitive advantages in terms of all performance metrics, such as speed, power
and area. Through the provision of a degree of flexibility similar to that of a DSP and
performance and power consumption advantages approaching that of an ASIC,
coarse-grained dynamically reconfigurable processors are proving to be strong candidates
for processing cores used in future high performance multi-core processor systems.
This thesis investigates multi-core architectures with a newly emerging dynamically
reconfigurable processor â RICA, targeting WiMAX physical layer applications. A novel
master-slave multi-core architecture is proposed, using RICA processing cores. A SystemC
based simulator, called MRPSIM, is devised to model this multi-core architecture. This
simulator provides fast simulation speed and timing accuracy, offers flexible architectural
options to configure the multi-core architecture, and enables the analysis and investigation
of multi-core architectures. Meanwhile a profiling-driven mapping methodology is
developed to partition the WiMAX application into multiple tasks as well as schedule and
map these tasks onto the multi-core architecture, aiming to reduce the overall system
execution time. Both the MRPSIM simulator and the mapping methodology are seamlessly
integrated with the existing RICA tool flow.
Based on the proposed master-slave multi-core architecture, a series of diverse
homogeneous and heterogeneous multi-core solutions are designed for different fixed
WiMAX physical layer profiles. Implemented in ANSI C and executed on the MRPSIM
simulator, these multi-core solutions contain different numbers of cores, combine various memory architectures and task partitioning schemes, and deliver high throughputs at
relatively low area costs. Meanwhile a design space exploration methodology is developed
to search the design space for multi-core systems to find suitable solutions under certain
system constraints. Finally, laying a foundation for future multithreading exploration on the
proposed multi-core architecture, this thesis investigates the porting of a real-time operating
system â Micro C/OS-II to a single RICA processor. A multitasking version of WiMAX is
implemented on a single RICA processor with the operating system support
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