2,002 research outputs found
Channel Sounding for the Masses: Low Complexity GNU 802.11b Channel Impulse Response Estimation
New techniques in cross-layer wireless networks are building demand for
ubiquitous channel sounding, that is, the capability to measure channel impulse
response (CIR) with any standard wireless network and node. Towards that goal,
we present a software-defined IEEE 802.11b receiver and CIR estimation system
with little additional computational complexity compared to 802.11b reception
alone. The system implementation, using the universal software radio peripheral
(USRP) and GNU Radio, is described and compared to previous work. By overcoming
computational limitations and performing direct-sequence spread-spectrum
(DS-SS) matched filtering on the USRP, we enable high-quality yet inexpensive
CIR estimation. We validate the channel sounder and present a drive test
campaign which measures hundreds of channels between WiFi access points and an
in-vehicle receiver in urban and suburban areas
An empirical evaluation of High-Level Synthesis languages and tools for database acceleration
High Level Synthesis (HLS) languages and tools are emerging as the most promising technique to make FPGAs more accessible to software developers. Nevertheless, picking the most suitable HLS for a certain class of algorithms depends on requirements such as area and throughput, as well as on programmer experience. In this paper, we explore the different trade-offs present when using a representative set of HLS tools in the context of Database Management Systems (DBMS) acceleration. More specifically, we conduct an empirical analysis of four representative frameworks (Bluespec SystemVerilog, Altera OpenCL, LegUp and Chisel) that we utilize to accelerate commonly-used database algorithms such as sorting, the median operator, and hash joins. Through our implementation experience and empirical results for database acceleration, we conclude that the selection of the most suitable HLS depends on a set of orthogonal characteristics, which we highlight for each HLS framework.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author’s final draft
FPGA-Based Bandwidth Selection for Kernel Density Estimation Using High Level Synthesis Approach
FPGA technology can offer significantly hi\-gher performance at much lower
power consumption than is available from CPUs and GPUs in many computational
problems. Unfortunately, programming for FPGA (using ha\-rdware description
languages, HDL) is a difficult and not-trivial task and is not intuitive for
C/C++/Java programmers. To bring the gap between programming effectiveness and
difficulty the High Level Synthesis (HLS) approach is promoting by main FPGA
vendors. Nowadays, time-intensive calculations are mainly performed on GPU/CPU
architectures, but can also be successfully performed using HLS approach. In
the paper we implement a bandwidth selection algorithm for kernel density
estimation (KDE) using HLS and show techniques which were used to optimize the
final FPGA implementation. We are also going to show that FPGA speedups,
comparing to highly optimized CPU and GPU implementations, are quite
substantial. Moreover, power consumption for FPGA devices is usually much less
than typical power consumption of the present CPUs and GPUs.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures, extended version of initial pape
Transformations of High-Level Synthesis Codes for High-Performance Computing
Specialized hardware architectures promise a major step in performance and
energy efficiency over the traditional load/store devices currently employed in
large scale computing systems. The adoption of high-level synthesis (HLS) from
languages such as C/C++ and OpenCL has greatly increased programmer
productivity when designing for such platforms. While this has enabled a wider
audience to target specialized hardware, the optimization principles known from
traditional software design are no longer sufficient to implement
high-performance codes. Fast and efficient codes for reconfigurable platforms
are thus still challenging to design. To alleviate this, we present a set of
optimizing transformations for HLS, targeting scalable and efficient
architectures for high-performance computing (HPC) applications. Our work
provides a toolbox for developers, where we systematically identify classes of
transformations, the characteristics of their effect on the HLS code and the
resulting hardware (e.g., increases data reuse or resource consumption), and
the objectives that each transformation can target (e.g., resolve interface
contention, or increase parallelism). We show how these can be used to
efficiently exploit pipelining, on-chip distributed fast memory, and on-chip
streaming dataflow, allowing for massively parallel architectures. To quantify
the effect of our transformations, we use them to optimize a set of
throughput-oriented FPGA kernels, demonstrating that our enhancements are
sufficient to scale up parallelism within the hardware constraints. With the
transformations covered, we hope to establish a common framework for
performance engineers, compiler developers, and hardware developers, to tap
into the performance potential offered by specialized hardware architectures
using HLS
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