27,842 research outputs found
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Silicon compilation
Silicon compilation is a term used for many different purposes. In this paper we define silicon compilation as a mapping from some higher level description into layout. We define the basic issues in structural and behavioral silicon compilation and some possible solutions to those issues. Finally, we define the concept of an intelligent silicon compiler in which the compiler evaluates the quality of the generated design and attempts to improve it if it is not satisfactory
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Microarchitecture optimization for timing and layout
In recent years the drive to produce more complex integrated circuits while spending less design time has driven the demand for design automation tools. The search for design automation methods has resulted in the design of numerous behavioral synthesis and logic synthesis tools. This report describes a system that fills the gap between traditional behavioral synthesis and logic synthesis tools. Techniques are introduced for improving the microarchitecture structure and using feedback from lower-level optimization tools to guide design optimizations while attempting to meet user specified area and time constraints. These techniques include the capability for mixing layout styles such as custom layout for random-logic components and bit-slicing for regularly structured components. In this manner the entire design, control logic and datapath, can be optimized at the same time. Further, this paper presents a new methodology for microarchitecture-level optimization that greatly reduces the amount of technology-specific knowledge necessary to perform the optimizations
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Behavioral synthesis from VHDL using structured modeling
This dissertation describes work in behavioral synthesis involving the development of a VHDL Synthesis System VSS which accepts a VHDL behavioral input specification and performs technology independent synthesis to generate a circuit netlist of generic components. The VHDL language is used for input and output descriptions. An intermediate representation which incorporates signal typing and component attributes simplifies compilation and facilitates design optimization.A Structured Modeling methodology has been developed to suggest standard VHDL modeling practices for synthesis. Structured modeling provides recommendations for the use of available VHDL description styles so that optimal designs will be synthesized.A design composed of generic components is synthesized from the input description through a process of Graph Compilation, Graph Criticism, and Design Compilation. Experiments were performed to demonstrate the effects of different modeling styles on the quality of the design produced by VSS. Several alternative VHDL models were examined for each benchmark, illustrating the improvements in design quality achieved when Structured Modeling guidelines were followed
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Memory-Based High-Level Synthesis Optimizations Security Exploration on the Power Side-Channel
High-level synthesis (HLS) allows hardware designers to think algorithmically and not worry about low-level, cycle-by-cycle details. This provides the ability to quickly explore the architectural design space and tradeoffs between resource utilization and performance. Unfortunately, security evaluation is not a standard part of the HLS design flow. In this article, we aim to understand the effects of memory-based HLS optimizations on power side-channel leakage. We use Xilinx Vivado HLS to develop different cryptographic cores, implement them on a Spartan-6 FPGA, and collect power traces. We evaluate the designs with respect to resource utilization, performance, and information leakage through power consumption. We have two important observations and contributions. First, the choice of resource optimization directive results in different levels of side-channel vulnerabilities. Second, the partitioning optimization directive can greatly compromise the hardware cryptographic system through power side-channel leakage due to the deployment of memory control logic. We describe an evaluation procedure for power side-channel leakage and use it to make best-effort recommendations about how to design more secure architectures in the cryptographic domain
A Multi-objective Perspective for Operator Scheduling using Fine-grained DVS Architecture
The stringent power budget of fine grained power managed digital integrated
circuits have driven chip designers to optimize power at the cost of area and
delay, which were the traditional cost criteria for circuit optimization. The
emerging scenario motivates us to revisit the classical operator scheduling
problem under the availability of DVFS enabled functional units that can
trade-off cycles with power. We study the design space defined due to this
trade-off and present a branch-and-bound(B/B) algorithm to explore this state
space and report the pareto-optimal front with respect to area and power. The
scheduling also aims at maximum resource sharing and is able to attain
sufficient area and power gains for complex benchmarks when timing constraints
are relaxed by sufficient amount. Experimental results show that the algorithm
that operates without any user constraint(area/power) is able to solve the
problem for most available benchmarks, and the use of power budget or area
budget constraints leads to significant performance gain.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, International journal of VLSI design &
Communication Systems (VLSICS
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Chippe : a system for constraint driven behavioral synthesis
This report describes the Chippe system, gives some background previous work and describes several sample design runs of the system. Also presented are the sources of the design tradeoffs used by Chippe, and overview of the internal design model, and experiences using the system
AutoAccel: Automated Accelerator Generation and Optimization with Composable, Parallel and Pipeline Architecture
CPU-FPGA heterogeneous architectures are attracting ever-increasing attention
in an attempt to advance computational capabilities and energy efficiency in
today's datacenters. These architectures provide programmers with the ability
to reprogram the FPGAs for flexible acceleration of many workloads.
Nonetheless, this advantage is often overshadowed by the poor programmability
of FPGAs whose programming is conventionally a RTL design practice. Although
recent advances in high-level synthesis (HLS) significantly improve the FPGA
programmability, it still leaves programmers facing the challenge of
identifying the optimal design configuration in a tremendous design space.
This paper aims to address this challenge and pave the path from software
programs towards high-quality FPGA accelerators. Specifically, we first propose
the composable, parallel and pipeline (CPP) microarchitecture as a template of
accelerator designs. Such a well-defined template is able to support efficient
accelerator designs for a broad class of computation kernels, and more
importantly, drastically reduce the design space. Also, we introduce an
analytical model to capture the performance and resource trade-offs among
different design configurations of the CPP microarchitecture, which lays the
foundation for fast design space exploration. On top of the CPP
microarchitecture and its analytical model, we develop the AutoAccel framework
to make the entire accelerator generation automated. AutoAccel accepts a
software program as an input and performs a series of code transformations
based on the result of the analytical-model-based design space exploration to
construct the desired CPP microarchitecture. Our experiments show that the
AutoAccel-generated accelerators outperform their corresponding software
implementations by an average of 72x for a broad class of computation kernels
From FPGA to ASIC: A RISC-V processor experience
This work document a correct design flow using these tools in the Lagarto RISC- V Processor and the RTL design considerations that must be taken into account, to move from a design for FPGA to design for ASIC
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Survey of partitioning techniques in silicon compilation
In the silicon compilation design process, partitioning is usually the first problem to be investigated because partitioning algorithms form the backbone of many algorithms including: system synthesis, processor synthesis, floorplanning, and placement. In this survey, several partitioning techniques will be examined. In addition, this paper will review the partitioning algorithms used by synthesis systems at different design levels
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