5 research outputs found

    SpiNNaker: Fault tolerance in a power- and area- constrained large-scale neuromimetic architecture

    Get PDF
    AbstractSpiNNaker is a biologically-inspired massively-parallel computer designed to model up to a billion spiking neurons in real-time. A full-fledged implementation of a SpiNNaker system will comprise more than 105 integrated circuits (half of which are SDRAMs and half multi-core systems-on-chip). Given this scale, it is unavoidable that some components fail and, in consequence, fault-tolerance is a foundation of the system design. Although the target application can tolerate a certain, low level of failures, important efforts have been devoted to incorporate different techniques for fault tolerance. This paper is devoted to discussing how hardware and software mechanisms collaborate to make SpiNNaker operate properly even in the very likely scenario of component failures and how it can tolerate system-degradation levels well above those expected

    Fault tolerant delay insensitive inter-chip communication

    No full text

    Multi-resource approach to asynchronous SoC : design and tool support

    Get PDF
    As silicon cost reduces, the demands for higher performance and lower power consumption are ever increasing. The ability to dynamically control the number of resources employed can help balance and optimise a system in terms of its throughput, power consumption, and resilience to errors. The management of multiple resources requires building more advanced resource allocation logic than traditional 1-of-N arbiters posing the need for the efficient design flow supporting both the design and verification of such systems. Networks-on-Chip provide a good application example of distributed arbitration, in which the processor cores needing to transmit data are the clients; and the point-to-point links are the resources managed by routers. Building fast and smart arbiters can greatly benefit such systems in providing efficient and reliable communication service. In this thesis, a multi-resource arbiter was developed based on the Signal Transition Graph (STG) development flow. The arbiter distributes multiple active interchangeable resources that initiate requests when they are ready to be used. It supports concurrent resource utilization, which benefits creating asynchronous Multiple-Input-Multiple- Output (MIMO) queues. In order to deal with designs of higher complexity, an arbiter-oriented design flow is proposed. The flow is based on digital circuit components that are represented internally as STGs. This allows designing circuits without directly working with STGs but allowing their use for synthesis and formal verification. The interfaces for modelling, simulation, and visual model representation of the flow were implemented based on the existing modelling framework. As a result, the verification phase of the flow has helped to find hazards in existing Priority arbiter implementations. Finally, based on the logic-gate flow, the structure of a low-latency general purpose arbiter was developed. This design supports a wide variety of arbitration problems including the multi-resource management, which can benefit building NoCs employing complex and adaptive routing techniques.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceEPSRC grant GR/E044662/1 (STEP)GBUnited Kingdo

    Spatial parallelism in the routers of asynchronous on-chip networks

    Get PDF
    State-of-the-art multi-processor systems-on-chip use on-chip networks as their communication fabric. Although most on-chip networks are implemented synchronously, asynchronous on-chip networks have several advantages over their synchronous counterparts. Timing division multiplexing (TDM) flow control methods have been utilized in asynchronous on-chip networks extensively. The synchronization required by TDM leads to significant speed penalties. Compared with using TDM methods, spatial parallelism methods, such as the spatial division multiplexing (SDM) flow control method, achieve better network throughput with less area overhead.This thesis proposes several techniques to increase spatial parallelism in the routers of asynchronous on-chip networks.Channel slicing is a new pipeline structure that alleviates the speed penalty by removing the synchronization among bit-level data pipelines. It is also found out that the lookahead pipeline using early evaluated acknowledgement can be used in routers to further improve speed.SDM is a new flow control method proposed for asynchronous on-chip networks. It improves network throughput without introducing synchronization among buffers of different frames, which is required by TDM methods. It is also found that the area overhead of SDM is smaller than the virtual channel (VC) flow control method -- the most used TDM method. The major design problem of SDM is the area consuming crossbars. A novel 2-stage Clos switch structure is proposed to replace the crossbar in SDM routers, which significantly reduces the area overhead. This Clos switch is dynamically reconfigured by a new asynchronous Clos scheduler.Several asynchronous SDM routers are implemented using these new techniques. An asynchronous VC router is also reproduced for comparison. Performance analyses show that the SDM routers outperform the VC router in throughput, area overhead and energy efficiency.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo

    Spatial parallelism in the routers of asynchronous on-chip networks

    Get PDF
    State-of-the-art multi-processor systems-on-chip use on-chip networks as their communication fabric. Although most on-chip networks are implemented synchronously, asynchronous on-chip networks have several advantages over their synchronous counterparts. Timing division multiplexing (TDM) flow control methods have been utilized in asynchronous on-chip networks extensively. The synchronization required by TDM leads to significant speed penalties. Compared with using TDM methods, spatial parallelism methods, such as the spatial division multiplexing (SDM) flow control method, achieve better network throughput with less area overhead.This thesis proposes several techniques to increase spatial parallelism in the routers of asynchronous on-chip networks.Channel slicing is a new pipeline structure that alleviates the speed penalty by removing the synchronization among bit-level data pipelines. It is also found out that the lookahead pipeline using early evaluated acknowledgement can be used in routers to further improve speed.SDM is a new flow control method proposed for asynchronous on-chip networks. It improves network throughput without introducing synchronization among buffers of different frames, which is required by TDM methods. It is also found that the area overhead of SDM is smaller than the virtual channel (VC) flow control method -- the most used TDM method. The major design problem of SDM is the area consuming crossbars. A novel 2-stage Clos switch structure is proposed to replace the crossbar in SDM routers, which significantly reduces the area overhead. This Clos switch is dynamically reconfigured by a new asynchronous Clos scheduler.Several asynchronous SDM routers are implemented using these new techniques. An asynchronous VC router is also reproduced for comparison. Performance analyses show that the SDM routers outperform the VC router in throughput, area overhead and energy efficiency.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
    corecore