5,912 research outputs found

    CRoute: a fast high-quality timing-driven connection-based FPGA router

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    FPGA routing is an important part of physical design as the programmable interconnection network requires the majority of the total silicon area and the connections largely contribute to delay and power. It should also occur with minimum runtime to enable efficient design exploration. In this work we elaborate on the concept of the connection-based routing principle. The algorithm is improved and a timing-driven version is introduced. The router, called CROUTE, is implemented in an easy to adapt FPGA CAD framework written in Java, which is publicly available on GitHub. Quality and runtime are compared to the state-of-the-art router in VPR 7.0.7. Benchmarking is done with the TITAN23 design suite, which consists of large heterogeneous designs targeted to a detailed representation of the Stratix IV FPGA. CROUTE gains in both the total wirelength and maximum clock frequency while reducing the routing runtime. The total wire-length reduces by 11% and the maximum clock frequency increases by 6%. These high-quality results are obtained in 3.4x less routing runtime

    Optimized Surface Code Communication in Superconducting Quantum Computers

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    Quantum computing (QC) is at the cusp of a revolution. Machines with 100 quantum bits (qubits) are anticipated to be operational by 2020 [googlemachine,gambetta2015building], and several-hundred-qubit machines are around the corner. Machines of this scale have the capacity to demonstrate quantum supremacy, the tipping point where QC is faster than the fastest classical alternative for a particular problem. Because error correction techniques will be central to QC and will be the most expensive component of quantum computation, choosing the lowest-overhead error correction scheme is critical to overall QC success. This paper evaluates two established quantum error correction codes---planar and double-defect surface codes---using a set of compilation, scheduling and network simulation tools. In considering scalable methods for optimizing both codes, we do so in the context of a full microarchitectural and compiler analysis. Contrary to previous predictions, we find that the simpler planar codes are sometimes more favorable for implementation on superconducting quantum computers, especially under conditions of high communication congestion.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, The 50th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Microarchitectur
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