635 research outputs found

    Design of a Five Stage Pipeline CPU with Interruption System

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    A central processing unit (CPU), also referred to as a central processor unit, is the hardware within a computer that carries out the instructions of a computer program by performing the basic arithmetical, logical, and input/output operations of the system. The term has been in use in the computer industry at least since the early 1960s.The form, design, and implementation of CPUs have changed over the course of their history, but their fundamental operation remains much the same. A computer can have more than one CPU; this is called multiprocessing. All modern CPUs are microprocessors, meaning contained on a single chip. Some integrated circuits (ICs) can contain multiple CPUs on a single chip; those ICs are called multi-core processors. An IC containing a CPU can also contain peripheral devices, and other components of a computer system; this is called a system on a chip (SoC).Two typical components of a CPU are the arithmetic logic unit (ALU), which performs arithmetic and logical operations, and the control unit (CU), which extracts instructions from memory and decodes and executes them, calling on the ALU when necessary. Not all computational systems rely on a central processing unit. An array processor or vector processor has multiple parallel computing elements, with no one unit considered the "center". In the distributed computing model, problems are solved by a distributed interconnected set of processors

    Harmless, a Hardware Architecture Description Language Dedicated to Real-Time Embedded System Simulation

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    International audienceValidation and Verification of embedded systems through simulation can be conducted at many levels, from the simulation of a high-level application model to the simulation of the actual binary code using an accurate model of the processor. However, for real-time applications, the simulated execution time must be as close as possible to the execution time on the actual platform and in this case the latter gives the closest results. The main drawback of the simulation of application's software using an accurate model of the processor resides in the development of a handwritten simulator which is a difficult and tedious task. This paper presents Harmless, a hardware Architecture Description Language (ADL) that mainly targets real-time embedded systems. Harmless is dedicated to the generation of simulator of the hardware platform to develop and test real-time embedded applications. Compared to existing ADLs, Harmless1) offers a more flexible description of the Instruction Set Architecture (ISA) 2) allows to describe the microarchitecture independently of the ISA to ease its reuse and 3) compares favorably to simulators generated by the existing ADLs toolsets

    Proceedings of the 21st Conference on Formal Methods in Computer-Aided Design – FMCAD 2021

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    The Conference on Formal Methods in Computer-Aided Design (FMCAD) is an annual conference on the theory and applications of formal methods in hardware and system verification. FMCAD provides a leading forum to researchers in academia and industry for presenting and discussing groundbreaking methods, technologies, theoretical results, and tools for reasoning formally about computing systems. FMCAD covers formal aspects of computer-aided system design including verification, specification, synthesis, and testing

    The Cost of Application-Class Processing: Energy and Performance Analysis of a Linux-Ready 1.7-GHz 64-Bit RISC-V Core in 22-nm FDSOI Technology

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    The open-source RISC-V instruction set architecture (ISA) is gaining traction, both in industry and academia. The ISA is designed to scale from microcontrollers to server-class processors. Furthermore, openness promotes the availability of various open-source and commercial implementations. Our main contribution in this paper is a thorough power, performance, and efficiency analysis of the RISC-V ISA targeting baseline "application class" functionality, i.e., supporting the Linux OS and its application environment based on our open-source single-issue in-order implementation of the 64-bit ISA variant (RV64GC) called Ariane. Our analysis is based on a detailed power and efficiency analysis of the RISC-V ISA extracted from silicon measurements and calibrated simulation of an Ariane instance (RV64IMC) taped-out in GlobalFoundries 22FDX technology. Ariane runs at up to 1.7-GHz, achieves up to 40-Gop/sW energy efficiency, which is superior to similar cores presented in the literature. We provide insight into the interplay between functionality required for the application-class execution (e.g., virtual memory, caches, and multiple modes of privileged operation) and energy cost. We also compare Ariane with RISCY, a simpler and a slower microcontroller-class core. Our analysis confirms that supporting application-class execution implies a nonnegligible energy-efficiency loss and that compute performance is more cost-effectively boosted by instruction extensions (e.g., packed SIMD) rather than the high-frequency operation

    Architectural specification, exploration and simulation through rewriting-logic

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    In recent years Arvind’s Group at MIT has shown the usefulness of term rewriting theory for the specification of processor architectures. In their approach processors specified by term rewriting systems are translated into a standard hardware description language for simulation purposes.Keywords: Rewriting-logic, High Level Specification and Simulation, Design Environment.&nbsp

    The 1991 3rd NASA Symposium on VLSI Design

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    Papers from the symposium are presented from the following sessions: (1) featured presentations 1; (2) very large scale integration (VLSI) circuit design; (3) VLSI architecture 1; (4) featured presentations 2; (5) neural networks; (6) VLSI architectures 2; (7) featured presentations 3; (8) verification 1; (9) analog design; (10) verification 2; (11) design innovations 1; (12) asynchronous design; and (13) design innovations 2

    Sovelluskohtainen käskykantaprosessori tulevaisuuden radiomikropiireihin

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    Licensed Assisted Access is a 3GPP specified feature, for using the unlicensed frequen-cy band as a supplemental transmission medium to the licensed band. LAA uses clear channel assessment, for discovering the channel state and accessing the medium. LAA provides a contention based algorithm, featuring a conservative listen-before-talk scheme, and random back-off. This CCA scheme is thought to increase co-existence with existing technologies in the unlicensed band, namely, WLAN and Bluetooth. Application-specific instruction-set processors can be tailored to fit most applications, and offer increased flexibility to hardware design through, programmable solutions. ASIP architecture is defined by the designer, while the ASIP tools provide retargetable compiler generation and automatic hardware description generation, for faster design exploration. In this thesis, we explore the 3GPP LAA downlink requirements, and identify the key processing challenges as FFT, energy detection and carrier state maintenance. To design an efficient ASIP for LAA, we explore the different architectural choices we have available and arrive at a statically scheduled, multi-issue architecture. We evaluate dif-ferent design approaches, and choose a Nokia internal ASIP design as the basis for our solution. We modify the design, to meet our requirements and conclude that the pro-posed solution should fit the LAA use case well
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