1,092 research outputs found

    Smart technologies for effective reconfiguration: the FASTER approach

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    Current and future computing systems increasingly require that their functionality stays flexible after the system is operational, in order to cope with changing user requirements and improvements in system features, i.e. changing protocols and data-coding standards, evolving demands for support of different user applications, and newly emerging applications in communication, computing and consumer electronics. Therefore, extending the functionality and the lifetime of products requires the addition of new functionality to track and satisfy the customers needs and market and technology trends. Many contemporary products along with the software part incorporate hardware accelerators for reasons of performance and power efficiency. While adaptivity of software is straightforward, adaptation of the hardware to changing requirements constitutes a challenging problem requiring delicate solutions. The FASTER (Facilitating Analysis and Synthesis Technologies for Effective Reconfiguration) project aims at introducing a complete methodology to allow designers to easily implement a system specification on a platform which includes a general purpose processor combined with multiple accelerators running on an FPGA, taking as input a high-level description and fully exploiting, both at design time and at run time, the capabilities of partial dynamic reconfiguration. The goal is that for selected application domains, the FASTER toolchain will be able to reduce the design and verification time of complex reconfigurable systems providing additional novel verification features that are not available in existing tool flows

    Exploiting partial reconfiguration through PCIe for a microphone array network emulator

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    The current Microelectromechanical Systems (MEMS) technology enables the deployment of relatively low-cost wireless sensor networks composed of MEMS microphone arrays for accurate sound source localization. However, the evaluation and the selection of the most accurate and power-efficient network’s topology are not trivial when considering dynamic MEMS microphone arrays. Although software simulators are usually considered, they consist of high-computational intensive tasks, which require hours to days to be completed. In this paper, we present an FPGA-based platform to emulate a network of microphone arrays. Our platform provides a controlled simulated acoustic environment, able to evaluate the impact of different network configurations such as the number of microphones per array, the network’s topology, or the used detection method. Data fusion techniques, combining the data collected by each node, are used in this platform. The platform is designed to exploit the FPGA’s partial reconfiguration feature to increase the flexibility of the network emulator as well as to increase performance thanks to the use of the PCI-express high-bandwidth interface. On the one hand, the network emulator presents a higher flexibility by partially reconfiguring the nodes’ architecture in runtime. On the other hand, a set of strategies and heuristics to properly use partial reconfiguration allows the acceleration of the emulation by exploiting the execution parallelism. Several experiments are presented to demonstrate some of the capabilities of our platform and the benefits of using partial reconfiguration

    Are coarse-grained overlays ready for general purpose application acceleration on FPGAs?

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    Combining processors with hardware accelerators has become a norm with systems-on-chip (SoCs) ever present in modern compute devices. Heterogeneous programmable system on chip platforms sometimes referred to as hybrid FPGAs, tightly couple general purpose processors with high performance reconfigurable fabrics, providing a more flexible alternative. We can now think of a software application with hardware accelerated portions that are reconfigured at runtime. While such ideas have been explored in the past, modern hybrid FPGAs are the first commercial platforms to enable this move to a more software oriented view, where reconfiguration enables hardware resources to be shared by multiple tasks in a bigger application. However, while the rapidly increasing logic density and more capable hard resources found in modern hybrid FPGA devices should make them widely deployable, they remain constrained within specialist application domains. This is due to both design productivity issues and a lack of suitable hardware abstraction to eliminate the need for working with platform-specific details, as server and desktop virtualization has done in a more general sense. To allow mainstream adoption of FPGA based accelerators in general purpose computing, there is a need to virtualize FPGAs and make them more accessible to application developers who are accustomed to software API abstractions and fast development cycles. In this paper, we discuss the role of overlay architectures in enabling general purpose FPGA application acceleration

    Techniques for low-overhead dynamic partial reconfiguration of FPGAs

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    High level modeling of Partially Dynamically Reconfigurable FPGAs based on MDE and MARTE

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    International audienceSystem-on-Chip (SoC) architectures are becoming the preferred solution for implementing modern embedded systems. However their design complexity continues to augment due to the increase in integrated hardware resources requiring new design methodologies and tools. In this paper we present a novel SoC co-design methodology based on aModel Driven Engineering framework while utilizing the MARTE (Modeling and Analysis of Real-time and Embedded Systems) standard. This methodology permits us to model fine grain reconfigurable architectures such as FPGAs and allows to extend the standard for integrating new features such as Partial Dynamic Reconfiguration supported by modern FPGAs. The overall objective is to carry out modeling at a high abstraction level expressed in a graphical language like UML (Unified Modeling Language) and afterwards transformations of these models, automatically generate the necessary specifications required for FPGA implementation
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