32 research outputs found

    Simulation Native des Systèmes Multiprocesseurs sur Puce à l'aide de la Virtualisation Assistée par le Matériel

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    L'intégration de plusieurs processeurs hétérogènes en un seul système sur puce (SoC) est une tendance claire dans les systèmes embarqués. La conception et la vérification de ces systèmes nécessitent des plateformes rapides de simulation, et faciles à construire. Parmi les approches de simulation de logiciels, la simulation native est un bon candidat grâce à l'exécution native de logiciel embarqué sur la machine hôte, ce qui permet des simulations à haute vitesse, sans nécessiter le développement de simulateurs d'instructions. Toutefois, les techniques de simulation natives existantes exécutent le logiciel de simulation dans l'espace de mémoire partagée entre le matériel modélisé et le système d'exploitation hôte. Il en résulte de nombreux problèmes, par exemple les conflits l'espace d'adressage et les chevauchements de mémoire ainsi que l'utilisation des adresses de la machine hôte plutôt des celles des plates-formes matérielles cibles. Cela rend pratiquement impossible la simulation native du code existant fonctionnant sur la plate-forme cible. Pour surmonter ces problèmes, nous proposons l'ajout d'une couche transparente de traduction de l'espace adressage pour séparer l'espace d'adresse cible de celui du simulateur de hôte. Nous exploitons la technologie de virtualisation assistée par matériel (HAV pour Hardware-Assisted Virtualization) à cet effet. Cette technologie est maintenant disponibles sur plupart de processeurs grande public à usage général. Les expériences montrent que cette solution ne dégrade pas la vitesse de simulation native, tout en gardant la possibilité de réaliser l'évaluation des performances du logiciel simulé. La solution proposée est évolutive et flexible et nous fournit les preuves nécessaires pour appuyer nos revendications avec des solutions de simulation multiprocesseurs et hybrides. Nous abordons également la simulation d'exécutables cross- compilés pour les processeurs VLIW (Very Long Instruction Word) en utilisant une technique de traduction binaire statique (SBT) pour généré le code natif. Ainsi il n'est pas nécessaire de faire de traduction à la volée ou d'interprétation des instructions. Cette approche est intéressante dans les situations où le code source n'est pas disponible ou que la plate-forme cible n'est pas supporté par les compilateurs reciblable, ce qui est généralement le cas pour les processeurs VLIW. Les simulateurs générés s'exécutent au-dessus de notre plate-forme basée sur le HAV et modélisent les processeurs de la série C6x de Texas Instruments (TI). Les résultats de simulation des binaires pour VLIW montrent une accélération de deux ordres de grandeur par rapport aux simulateurs précis au cycle près.Integration of multiple heterogeneous processors into a single System-on-Chip (SoC) is a clear trend in embedded systems. Designing and verifying these systems require high-speed and easy-to-build simulation platforms. Among the software simulation approaches, native simulation is a good candidate since the embedded software is executed natively on the host machine, resulting in high speed simulations and without requiring instruction set simulator development effort. However, existing native simulation techniques execute the simulated software in memory space shared between the modeled hardware and the host operating system. This results in many problems, including address space conflicts and overlaps as well as the use of host machine addresses instead of the target hardware platform ones. This makes it practically impossible to natively simulate legacy code running on the target platform. To overcome these issues, we propose the addition of a transparent address space translation layer to separate the target address space from that of the host simulator. We exploit the Hardware-Assisted Virtualization (HAV) technology for this purpose, which is now readily available on almost all general purpose processors. Experiments show that this solution does not degrade the native simulation speed, while keeping the ability to accomplish software performance evaluation. The proposed solution is scalable as well as flexible and we provide necessary evidence to support our claims with multiprocessor and hybrid simulation solutions. We also address the simulation of cross-compiled Very Long Instruction Word (VLIW) executables, using a Static Binary Translation (SBT) technique to generated native code that does not require run-time translation or interpretation support. This approach is interesting in situations where either the source code is not available or the target platform is not supported by any retargetable compilation framework, which is usually the case for VLIW processors. The generated simulators execute on top of our HAV based platform and model the Texas Instruments (TI) C6x series processors. Simulation results for VLIW binaries show a speed-up of around two orders of magnitude compared to the cycle accurate simulators.SAVOIE-SCD - Bib.électronique (730659901) / SudocGRENOBLE1/INP-Bib.électronique (384210012) / SudocGRENOBLE2/3-Bib.électronique (384219901) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Hybrid prototyping of multicore embedded systems

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    Multicore platforms are becoming increasingly pervasive in modern embedded systems. System level modeling techniques have enabled creation of fast software models of multicore platforms, commonly known as Virtual Prototypes, for early functional validation of embedded software, before the hardware is available. On the other hand, for accurate performance validation, the complete multicore platform can be implemented as a physical prototype on FPGA. Both virtual platforms and FPGA prototypes have their respective pros and cons. Virtual platforms have the advantage of high speed functional simulation and, typically, scale well with the number of cores. However, the accuracy of performance estimation is sacrificed. FPGA prototypes provide cycle-accurate performance estimation, because the software executes directly on an FPGA implementation of the target cores. However, it takes a significant amount of time to design, implement and test the inter-core communication architecture on the FPGA. In this thesis we propose to design a novel system-level modeling framework, called Hybrid Prototyping. Our goal is to provide the benefits of both virtual platforms and FPGA prototypes. It aims to provide early, fast, and scalable models, similar to virtual platforms, along with the cycle-accuracy of FPGA prototypes. Using hybrid prototyping, embedded software designers will be able to create concurrent applications and accurately analyze the performance implication of their optimizations before the chip is delivered. At the same time, multicore architects will be able to modify the platform model without having to do full system prototyping. Therefore, hybrid prototyping will enable early and reliable multicore embedded system design, resulting in huge productivity gains for both embedded software designers and multicore chip architects

    Early and Accurate Modeling of Streaming Embedded Applications

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    This thesis presents automatic generation of fast and accurate timed models of streaming embedded applications, before the complete software-hardware platform is available. We focus on streaming applications, because they tend to be the most compute-intensive applications on mobile devices. Therefore, it is critical to optimize the hardware-software platform for streaming applications, as early as possible in the design process. As such, fast, accurate and early models are essential for hardware-software optimization. Our design methodology is as follows. First, a measurement model is generated and executed, on the target processor, to predict the computation delays in an application. Next, the delays are annotated in the application code to generate a host-compiled model of the application. Our experiments show that such models can be generated and simulated at very high speed and accurately predict the computation load offered by the application. Our results with large streaming media applications, such as music and voice codecs, show that the estimation errors are less than 3.3%, while providing very high simulation speed. Therefore, using our models, embedded system designers can perform early optimizations to the system architecture with high confidence

    High Performance Embedded Computing

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    Nowadays, the prevalence of computing systems in our lives is so ubiquitous that we live in a cyber-physical world dominated by computer systems, from pacemakers to cars and airplanes. These systems demand for more computational performance to process large amounts of data from multiple data sources with guaranteed processing times. Actuating outside of the required timing bounds may cause the failure of the system, being vital for systems like planes, cars, business monitoring, e-trading, etc. High-Performance and Time-Predictable Embedded Computing presents recent advances in software architecture and tools to support such complex systems, enabling the design of embedded computing devices which are able to deliver high-performance whilst guaranteeing the application required timing bounds. Technical topics discussed in the book include: Parallel embedded platforms Programming models Mapping and scheduling of parallel computations Timing and schedulability analysis Runtimes and operating systemsThe work reflected in this book was done in the scope of the European project P SOCRATES, funded under the FP7 framework program of the European Commission. High-performance and time-predictable embedded computing is ideal for personnel in computer/communication/embedded industries as well as academic staff and master/research students in computer science, embedded systems, cyber-physical systems and internet-of-things

    High-Performance and Time-Predictable Embedded Computing

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    Nowadays, the prevalence of computing systems in our lives is so ubiquitous that we live in a cyber-physical world dominated by computer systems, from pacemakers to cars and airplanes. These systems demand for more computational performance to process large amounts of data from multiple data sources with guaranteed processing times. Actuating outside of the required timing bounds may cause the failure of the system, being vital for systems like planes, cars, business monitoring, e-trading, etc. High-Performance and Time-Predictable Embedded Computing presents recent advances in software architecture and tools to support such complex systems, enabling the design of embedded computing devices which are able to deliver high-performance whilst guaranteeing the application required timing bounds. Technical topics discussed in the book include: Parallel embedded platforms Programming models Mapping and scheduling of parallel computations Timing and schedulability analysis Runtimes and operating systems The work reflected in this book was done in the scope of the European project P SOCRATES, funded under the FP7 framework program of the European Commission. High-performance and time-predictable embedded computing is ideal for personnel in computer/communication/embedded industries as well as academic staff and master/research students in computer science, embedded systems, cyber-physical systems and internet-of-things.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Proceedings of the 5th International Workshop on Reconfigurable Communication-centric Systems on Chip 2010 - ReCoSoC\u2710 - May 17-19, 2010 Karlsruhe, Germany. (KIT Scientific Reports ; 7551)

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    ReCoSoC is intended to be a periodic annual meeting to expose and discuss gathered expertise as well as state of the art research around SoC related topics through plenary invited papers and posters. The workshop aims to provide a prospective view of tomorrow\u27s challenges in the multibillion transistor era, taking into account the emerging techniques and architectures exploring the synergy between flexible on-chip communication and system reconfigurability

    A Multi-core processor for hard real-time systems

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    The increasing demand for new functionalities in current and future hard real-time embedded systems, like the ones deployed in automotive and avionics industries, is driving an increment in the performance required in current embedded processors. Multi-core processors represent a good design solution to cope with such higher performance requirements due to their better performance-per-watt ratio while maintaining the core design simple. Moreover, multi-cores also allow executing mixed-criticality level workloads composed of tasks with and without hard real-time requirements, maximizing the utilization of the hardware resources while guaranteeing low cost and low power consumption. Despite those benefits, current multi-core processors are less analyzable than single-core ones due to the interferences between different tasks when accessing hardware shared resources. As a result, estimating a meaningful Worst-Case Execution Time (WCET) estimation - i.e. to compute an upper bound of the application's execution time - becomes extremely difficult, if not even impossible, because the execution time of a task may change depending on the other threads running at the same time. This makes the WCET of a task dependent on the set of inter-task interferences introduced by the co-running tasks. Providing a WCET estimation independent from the other tasks (time composability property) is a key requirement in hard real-time systems. This thesis proposes a new multi-core processor design in which time composability is achieved, hence enabling the use of multi-cores in hard real-time systems. With our proposals the WCET estimation of a HRT is independent from the other co-running tasks. To that end, we design a multi-core processor in which the maximum delay a request from a Hard Real-time Task (HRT), accessing a hardware shared resource can suffer due to other tasks is bounded: our processor guarantees that a request to a shared resource cannot be delayed longer than a given Upper Bound Delay (UBD). In addition, the UBD allows identifying the impact that different processor configurations may have on the WCET by determining the sensitivity of a HRT to different resource allocations. This thesis proposes an off-line task allocation algorithm (called IA3: Interference-Aware Allocation Algorithm), that allocates tasks in a task set based on the HRT's sensitivity to different resource allocations. As a result the hardware shared resources used by HRTs are minimized, by allowing Non Hard Real-time Tasks (NHRTs) to use the rest of resources. Overall, our proposals provide analyzability for the HRTs allowing NHRTs to be executed into the same chip without any effect on the HRTs. The previous first two proposals of this thesis focused on supporting the execution of multi-programmed workloads with mixed-criticality levels (composed of HRTs and NHRTs). Higher performance could be achieved by implementing multi-threaded applications. As a first step towards supporting hard real-time parallel applications, this thesis proposes a new hardware/software approach to guarantee a predictable execution of software pipelined parallel programs. This thesis also investigates a solution to verify the timing correctness of HRTs without requiring any modification in the core design: we design a hardware unit which is interfaced with the processor and integrated into a functional-safety aware methodology. This unit monitors the execution time of a block of instructions and it detects if it exceeds the WCET. Concretely, we show how to handle timing faults on a real industrial automotive platform.La creciente demanda de nuevas funcionalidades en los sistemas empotrados de tiempo real actuales y futuros en industrias como la automovilística y la de aviación, está impulsando un incremento en el rendimiento necesario en los actuales procesadores empotrados. Los procesadores multi-núcleo son una solución eficiente para obtener un mayor rendimiento ya que aumentan el rendimiento por vatio, manteniendo el diseño del núcleo simple. Por otra parte, los procesadores multi-núcleo también permiten ejecutar cargas de trabajo con niveles de tiempo real mixtas (formadas por tareas de tiempo real duro y laxo así como tareas sin requerimientos de tiempo real), maximizando así la utilización de los recursos de procesador y garantizando el bajo consumo de energía. Sin embargo, a pesar los beneficios mencionados anteriormente, los actuales procesadores multi-núcleo son menos analizables que los de un solo núcleo debido a las interferencias surgidas cuando múltiples tareas acceden simultáneamente a los recursos compartidos del procesador. Como resultado, la estimación del peor tiempo de ejecución (conocido como WCET) - es decir, una cota superior del tiempo de ejecución de la aplicación - se convierte en extremadamente difícil, si no imposible, porque el tiempo de ejecución de una tarea puede cambiar dependiendo de las otras tareas que se estén ejecutando concurrentemente. Determinar una estimación del WCET independiente de las otras tareas es un requisito clave en los sistemas empotrados de tiempo real duro. Esta tesis propone un nuevo diseño de procesador multi-núcleo en el que el tiempo de ejecución de las tareas se puede componer, lo que permitirá el uso de procesadores multi-núcleo en los sistemas de tiempo real duro. Para ello, diseñamos un procesador multi-núcleo en el que la máxima demora que puede sufrir una petición de una tarea de tiempo real duro (HRT) para acceder a un recurso hardware compartido debido a otras tareas está acotado, tiene un límite superior (UBD). Además, UBD permite identificar el impacto que las diferentes posibles configuraciones del procesador pueden tener en el WCET, mediante la determinación de la sensibilidad en la variación del tiempo de ejecución de diferentes reservas de recursos del procesador. Esta tesis propone un algoritmo estático de reserva de recursos (llamado IA3), que asigna tareas a núcleos en función de dicha sensibilidad. Como resultado los recursos compartidos del procesador usados por tareas HRT se reducen al mínimo, permitiendo que las tareas sin requerimiento de tiempo real (NHRTs) puedas beneficiarse del resto de recursos. Por lo tanto, las propuestas presentadas en esta tesis permiten el análisis del WCET para tareas HRT, permitiendo así mismo la ejecución de tareas NHRTs en el mismo procesador multi-núcleo, sin que estas tengan ningún efecto sobre las tareas HRT. Las propuestas presentadas anteriormente se centran en el soporte a la ejecución de múltiples cargas de trabajo con diferentes niveles de tiempo real (HRT y NHRTs). Sin embargo, un mayor rendimiento puede lograrse mediante la transformación una tarea en múltiples sub-tareas paralelas. Esta tesis propone una nueva técnica, con soporte del procesador y del sistema operativo, que garantiza una ejecución analizable del modelo de ejecución paralela software pipelining. Esta tesis también investiga una solución para verificar la corrección del WCET de HRT sin necesidad de ninguna modificación en el diseño de la base: un nuevo componente externo al procesador se conecta a este sin necesidad de modificarlo. Esta nueva unidad monitorea el tiempo de ejecución de un bloque de instrucciones y detecta si se excede el WCET. Esta unidad permite detectar fallos de sincronización en sistemas de computación utilizados en automóviles

    Embedded System Design

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    A unique feature of this open access textbook is to provide a comprehensive introduction to the fundamental knowledge in embedded systems, with applications in cyber-physical systems and the Internet of things. It starts with an introduction to the field and a survey of specification models and languages for embedded and cyber-physical systems. It provides a brief overview of hardware devices used for such systems and presents the essentials of system software for embedded systems, including real-time operating systems. The author also discusses evaluation and validation techniques for embedded systems and provides an overview of techniques for mapping applications to execution platforms, including multi-core platforms. Embedded systems have to operate under tight constraints and, hence, the book also contains a selected set of optimization techniques, including software optimization techniques. The book closes with a brief survey on testing. This fourth edition has been updated and revised to reflect new trends and technologies, such as the importance of cyber-physical systems (CPS) and the Internet of things (IoT), the evolution of single-core processors to multi-core processors, and the increased importance of energy efficiency and thermal issues

    Embedded System Design

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    A unique feature of this open access textbook is to provide a comprehensive introduction to the fundamental knowledge in embedded systems, with applications in cyber-physical systems and the Internet of things. It starts with an introduction to the field and a survey of specification models and languages for embedded and cyber-physical systems. It provides a brief overview of hardware devices used for such systems and presents the essentials of system software for embedded systems, including real-time operating systems. The author also discusses evaluation and validation techniques for embedded systems and provides an overview of techniques for mapping applications to execution platforms, including multi-core platforms. Embedded systems have to operate under tight constraints and, hence, the book also contains a selected set of optimization techniques, including software optimization techniques. The book closes with a brief survey on testing. This fourth edition has been updated and revised to reflect new trends and technologies, such as the importance of cyber-physical systems (CPS) and the Internet of things (IoT), the evolution of single-core processors to multi-core processors, and the increased importance of energy efficiency and thermal issues

    Many-core architectures with time predictable execution Support for hard real-time applications

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2013.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 183-193).Hybrid control systems are a growing domain of application. They are pervasive and their complexity is increasing rapidly. Distributed control systems for future "Intelligent Grid" and renewable energy generation systems are demanding high-performance, hard real-time computation, and more programmability. General-purpose computer systems are primarily designed to process data and not to interact with physical processes as required by these systems. Generic general-purpose architectures even with the use of real-time operating systems fail to meet the hard realtime constraints of hybrid system dynamics. ASIC, FPGA, or traditional embedded design approaches to these systems often result in expensive, complicated systems that are hard to program, reuse, or maintain. In this thesis, we propose a domain-specific architecture template targeting hybrid control system applications. Using power electronics control applications, we present new modeling techniques, synthesis methodologies, and a parameterizable computer architecture for these large distributed control systems. We propose a new system modeling approach, called Adaptive Hybrid Automaton, based on previous work in control system theory, that uses a mixed-model abstractions and lends itself well to digital processing. We develop a domain-specific architecture based on this modeling that uses heterogeneous processing units and predictable execution, called MARTHA. We develop a hard real-time aware router architecture to enable deterministic on-chip interconnect network communication. We present several algorithms for scheduling task-based applications onto these types of heterogeneous architectures. We create Heracles, an open-source, functional, parameterized, synthesizable many-core system design toolkit, that can be used to explore future multi/many-core processors with different topologies, routing schemes, processing elements or cores, and memory system organizations. Using the Heracles design tool we build a prototype of the proposed architecture using a state-of-the-art FPGA-based platform, and deploy and test it in actual physical power electronics systems. We develop and release an open-source, small representative set of power electronics system applications that can be used for hard real-time application benchmarking.by Michel A. Kinsy.Ph.D
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