19 research outputs found
A New Methodology to Manage FPGA Distributed Memory Content via Bitstream for Xilinx ZYNQ Devices
This paper proposes a methodology to access data and manage the content of distributed memories in FPGA designs through the configuration bitstream. Thanks to the methods proposed, it is possible to read and write the data content of registers without using the in/out ports of registers in a straightforward fashion. Hence, it offers the possibility of performing several operations, such as, to load, copy or compare the information stored in registers without the necessity of physical interconnections. This work includes two flows that simplify the designing process when using the proposed approach: while the first enables the protection or unprotection of writing on different partial regions through the bitstream, the second permits homogeneous instances of a design implemented in different reconfigurable regions to be obtained without losing efficiency. The approach is based and has been physically validated on the ZYNQ from Xilinx, and when using partially reconfigurable designs, it does not affect the hardware overhead nor the maximum operating frequency of the design.This work has been supported, within the fund for research groups of the Basque university system IT1440-22, by the Department of Education and, within PILAR ZE-2020/00022 and COMMUTE ZE-2021/00931 projects, by the Hazitek program, both of the Basque Government; the latter also by the Ministerio de Ciencia Innovación of Spain through the Centro para el Desarrollo Tecnológico Industrial (CDTI) within the projects IDI-20201264 and IDI-20220543, and through the Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional 2014–2020 (FEDER funds)
Runtime Scheduling, Allocation, and Execution of Real-Time Hardware Tasks onto Xilinx FPGAs Subject to Fault Occurrence
This paper describes a novel way to exploit the computation capabilities delivered by modern Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), not only towards a higher performance, but also towards an improved reliability. Computation-specific pieces of circuitry are dynamically scheduled and allocated to different resources on the chip based on a set of novel algorithms which are described in detail in this article. These algorithms consider most of the technological constraints existing in modern partially reconfigurable FPGAs as well as spontaneously occurring faults and emerging permanent damage in the silicon substrate of the chip. In addition, the algorithms target other important aspects such as communications and synchronization among the different computations that are carried out, either concurrently or at different times. The effectiveness of the proposed algorithms is tested by means of a wide range of synthetic simulations, and, notably, a proof-of-concept implementation of them using real FPGA hardware is outlined
Hardware and Software Task Scheduling for ARM-FPGA Platforms
ARM-FPGA coupled platforms allow accelerating the computation of specific algorithms by executing them in the FPGA fabric. Several computation steps of our case study for a stereo vision application have been accelerated by hardware implementations. Dynamic Partial Reconfiguration places these hardware tasks in the programmable logic at appropriate times. For an efficient scheduling, it needs to be decided when and where to execute a task. Although there already exist hardware/software scheduling strategies and algorithms, none exploit all possible optimization techniques: re-use, prefetching, parallelization, and pipelining of hardware tasks. The scheduling algorithm proposed in this paper takes this into account and optimizes for the objectives latency/throughput and power/energy
A Survey of Techniques For Improving Energy Efficiency in Embedded Computing Systems
Recent technological advances have greatly improved the performance and
features of embedded systems. With the number of just mobile devices now
reaching nearly equal to the population of earth, embedded systems have truly
become ubiquitous. These trends, however, have also made the task of managing
their power consumption extremely challenging. In recent years, several
techniques have been proposed to address this issue. In this paper, we survey
the techniques for managing power consumption of embedded systems. We discuss
the need of power management and provide a classification of the techniques on
several important parameters to highlight their similarities and differences.
This paper is intended to help the researchers and application-developers in
gaining insights into the working of power management techniques and designing
even more efficient high-performance embedded systems of tomorrow
MURAC: A unified machine model for heterogeneous computers
Includes bibliographical referencesHeterogeneous computing enables the performance and energy advantages of multiple distinct processing architectures to be efficiently exploited within a single machine. These systems are capable of delivering large performance increases by matching the applications to architectures that are most suited to them. The Multiple Runtime-reconfigurable Architecture Computer (MURAC) model has been proposed to tackle the problems commonly found in the design and usage of these machines. This model presents a system-level approach that creates a clear separation of concerns between the system implementer and the application developer. The three key concepts that make up the MURAC model are a unified machine model, a unified instruction stream and a unified memory space. A simple programming model built upon these abstractions provides a consistent interface for interacting with the underlying machine to the user application. This programming model simplifies application partitioning between hardware and software and allows the easy integration of different execution models within the single control ow of a mixed-architecture application. The theoretical and practical trade-offs of the proposed model have been explored through the design of several systems. An instruction-accurate system simulator has been developed that supports the simulated execution of mixed-architecture applications. An embedded System-on-Chip implementation has been used to measure the overhead in hardware resources required to support the model, which was found to be minimal. An implementation of the model within an operating system on a tightly-coupled reconfigurable processor platform has been created. This implementation is used to extend the software scheduler to allow for the full support of mixed-architecture applications in a multitasking environment. Different scheduling strategies have been tested using this scheduler for mixed-architecture applications. The design and implementation of these systems has shown that a unified abstraction model for heterogeneous computers provides important usability benefits to system and application designers. These benefits are achieved through a consistent view of the multiple different architectures to the operating system and user applications. This allows them to focus on achieving their performance and efficiency goals by gaining the benefits of different execution models during runtime without the complex implementation details of the system-level synchronisation and coordination
Towards the development of a reliable reconfigurable real-time operating system on FPGAs
In the last two decades, Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) have been
rapidly developed from simple “glue-logic” to a powerful platform capable of
implementing a System on Chip (SoC). Modern FPGAs achieve not only the high
performance compared with General Purpose Processors (GPPs), thanks to hardware
parallelism and dedication, but also better programming flexibility, in comparison to
Application Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs). Moreover, the hardware
programming flexibility of FPGAs is further harnessed for both performance and
manipulability, which makes Dynamic Partial Reconfiguration (DPR) possible. DPR
allows a part or parts of a circuit to be reconfigured at run-time, without interrupting
the rest of the chip’s operation. As a result, hardware resources can be more
efficiently exploited since the chip resources can be reused by swapping in or out
hardware tasks to or from the chip in a time-multiplexed fashion. In addition, DPR
improves fault tolerance against transient errors and permanent damage, such as
Single Event Upsets (SEUs) can be mitigated by reconfiguring the FPGA to avoid
error accumulation. Furthermore, power and heat can be reduced by removing
finished or idle tasks from the chip. For all these reasons above, DPR has
significantly promoted Reconfigurable Computing (RC) and has become a very hot
topic. However, since hardware integration is increasing at an exponential rate, and
applications are becoming more complex with the growth of user demands, highlevel
application design and low-level hardware implementation are increasingly
separated and layered. As a consequence, users can obtain little advantage from DPR
without the support of system-level middleware.
To bridge the gap between the high-level application and the low-level hardware
implementation, this thesis presents the important contributions towards a Reliable,
Reconfigurable and Real-Time Operating System (R3TOS), which facilitates the
user exploitation of DPR from the application level, by managing the complex
hardware in the background. In R3TOS, hardware tasks behave just like software
tasks, which can be created, scheduled, and mapped to different computing resources
on the fly. The novel contributions of this work are: 1) a novel implementation of an efficient task scheduler and allocator; 2) implementation of a novel real-time
scheduling algorithm (FAEDF) and two efficacious allocating algorithms (EAC and
EVC), which schedule tasks in real-time and circumvent emerging faults while
maintaining more compact empty areas. 3) Design and implementation of a faulttolerant
microprocessor by harnessing the existing FPGA resources, such as Error
Correction Code (ECC) and configuration primitives. 4) A novel symmetric
multiprocessing (SMP)-based architectures that supports shared memory programing
interface. 5) Two demonstrations of the integrated system, including a) the K-Nearest
Neighbour classifier, which is a non-parametric classification algorithm widely used
in various fields of data mining; and b) pairwise sequence alignment, namely the
Smith Waterman algorithm, used for identifying similarities between two biological
sequences.
R3TOS gives considerably higher flexibility to support scalable multi-user, multitasking
applications, whereby resources can be dynamically managed in respect of
user requirements and hardware availability. Benefiting from this, not only the
hardware resources can be more efficiently used, but also the system performance
can be significantly increased. Results show that the scheduling and allocating
efficiencies have been improved up to 2x, and the overall system performance is
further improved by ~2.5x. Future work includes the development of Network on
Chip (NoC), which is expected to further increase the communication throughput; as
well as the standardization and automation of our system design, which will be
carried out in line with the enablement of other high-level synthesis tools, to allow
application developers to benefit from the system in a more efficient manner
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)
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