10,453 research outputs found

    XpulpNN: Enabling Energy Efficient and Flexible Inference of Quantized Neural Networks on RISC-V Based IoT End Nodes

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    Heavily quantized fixed-point arithmetic is becoming a common approach to deploy Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) on limited-memory low-power IoT end-nodes. However, this trend is narrowed by the lack of support for low-bitwidth in the arithmetic units of state-of-the-art embedded Microcontrollers (MCUs). This work proposes a multi-precision arithmetic unit fully integrated into a RISC-V processor at the micro-architectural and ISA level to boost the efficiency of heavily Quantized Neural Network (QNN) inference on microcontroller-class cores. By extending the ISA with nibble (4-bit) and crumb (2-bit) SIMD instructions, we show near-linear speedup with respect to higher precision integer computation on the key kernels for QNN computation. Also, we propose a custom execution paradigm for SIMD sum-of-dot-product operations, which consists of fusing a dot product with a load operation, with an up to 1.64 × peak MAC/cycle improvement compared to a standard execution scenario. To further push the efficiency, we integrate the RISC-V extended core in a parallel cluster of 8 processors, with near-linear improvement with respect to a single core architecture. To evaluate the proposed extensions, we fully implement the cluster of processors in GF22FDX technology. QNN convolution kernels on a parallel cluster implementing the proposed extension run 6 × and 8 × faster when considering 4- and 2-bit data operands, respectively, compared to a baseline processing cluster only supporting 8-bit SIMD instructions. With a peak of 2.22 TOPs/s/W, the proposed solution achieves efficiency levels comparable with dedicated DNN inference accelerators and up to three orders of magnitude better than state-of-the-art ARM Cortex-M based microcontroller systems such as the low-end STM32L4 MCU and the high-end STM32H7 MCU

    Physical design of USB1.1

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    In earlier days, interfacing peripheral devices to host computer has a big problematic. There existed so many different kinds’ ports like serial port, parallel port, PS/2 etc. And their use restricts many situations, Such as no hot-pluggability and involuntary configuration. There are very less number of methods to connect the peripheral devices to host computer. The main reason that Universal Serial Bus was implemented to provide an additional benefits compared to earlier interfacing ports. USB is designed to allow many peripheral be connecting using single standardize interface. It provides an expandable fast, cost effective, hot-pluggable plug and play serial hardware interface that makes life of computer user easier allowing them to plug different devices to into USB port and have them configured automatically. In this thesis demonstrated the USB v1.1 architecture part in briefly and generated gate level net list form RTL code by applying the different constraints like timing, area and power. By applying the various types design constraints so that the performance was improved by 30%. And then it implemented in physically by using SoC encounter EDI system, estimation of chip size, power analysis and routing the clock signal to all flip-flops presented in the design. To reduce the clock switching power implemented register clustering algorithm (DBSCAN). In this design implementation TSMC 180nm technology library is used

    Physical Design and Clock Tree Synthesis Methods For A 8-Bit Processor

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    Now days a number of processors are available with a lot kind of feature from different industries. A processor with similar kind of architecture of the current processors only missing the memory stuffs like the RAM and ROM has been designed here with the help of Verilog style of coding. This processor contains architecturally the program counter, instruction register, ALU, ALU latch, General Purpose Registers, control state module, flag registers and the core module containing all the modules. And a test module is designed for testing the processor. After the design of the processor with successful functionality, the processor is synthesized with 180nm technology. The synthesis is performed with the data path optimization like the selection of proper adders and multipliers for timing optimization in the data path while the ALU operations are performed. During synthesis how to take care of the worst negative slack (WNS), how to include the clock gating cells, how to define the cost and path groups etc. have been covered. After the proper synthesis we get the proper net list and the synthesized constraint file for carrying out the physical design. In physical design the steps like floor-planning, partitioning, placement, legalization of the placement, clock tree synthesis, and routing etc. have been performed. At all the stages the static timing analysis is performed for the timing meet of the design for better performance in terms of timing or frequency. Each steps of physical design are discussed with special effort towards the concepts behind the step. Out of all the steps of physical design the clock tree synthesis is performed with some improvement in the performance of the clock tree by creating a symmetrical clock tree and maintaining more common clock paths. A special algorithm has been framed for creating a symmetrical clock tree and thereby making the power consumption of the clock tree low

    The Tribune-Democrat, January 6, 1949

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    Radiation Hardened by Design Methodologies for Soft-Error Mitigated Digital Architectures

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    abstract: Digital architectures for data encryption, processing, clock synthesis, data transfer, etc. are susceptible to radiation induced soft errors due to charge collection in complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuits (ICs). Radiation hardening by design (RHBD) techniques such as double modular redundancy (DMR) and triple modular redundancy (TMR) are used for error detection and correction respectively in such architectures. Multiple node charge collection (MNCC) causes domain crossing errors (DCE) which can render the redundancy ineffectual. This dissertation describes techniques to ensure DCE mitigation with statistical confidence for various designs. Both sequential and combinatorial logic are separated using these custom and computer aided design (CAD) methodologies. Radiation vulnerability and design overhead are studied on VLSI sub-systems including an advanced encryption standard (AES) which is DCE mitigated using module level coarse separation on a 90-nm process with 99.999% DCE mitigation. A radiation hardened microprocessor (HERMES2) is implemented in both 90-nm and 55-nm technologies with an interleaved separation methodology with 99.99% DCE mitigation while achieving 4.9% increased cell density, 28.5 % reduced routing and 5.6% reduced power dissipation over the module fences implementation. A DMR register-file (RF) is implemented in 55 nm process and used in the HERMES2 microprocessor. The RF array custom design and the decoders APR designed are explored with a focus on design cycle time. Quality of results (QOR) is studied from power, performance, area and reliability (PPAR) perspective to ascertain the improvement over other design techniques. A radiation hardened all-digital multiplying pulsed digital delay line (DDL) is designed for double data rate (DDR2/3) applications for data eye centering during high speed off-chip data transfer. The effect of noise, radiation particle strikes and statistical variation on the designed DDL are studied in detail. The design achieves the best in class 22.4 ps peak-to-peak jitter, 100-850 MHz range at 14 pJ/cycle energy consumption. Vulnerability of the non-hardened design is characterized and portions of the redundant DDL are separated in custom and auto-place and route (APR). Thus, a range of designs for mission critical applications are implemented using methodologies proposed in this work and their potential PPAR benefits explored in detail.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201
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