86 research outputs found

    CABAC accelerator architectures for video compression in future multimedida : a survey

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    The demands for high quality, real-time performance and multi-format video support in consumer multimedia products are ever increasing. In particular, the future multimedia systems require efficient video coding algorithms and corresponding adaptive high-performance computational platforms. The H.264/AVC video coding algorithms provide high enough compression efficiency to be utilized in these systems, and multimedia processors are able to provide the required adaptability, but the algorithms complexity demands for more efficient computing platforms. Heterogeneous (re-)configurable systems composed of multimedia processors and hardware accelerators constitute the main part of such platforms. In this paper, we survey the hardware accelerator architectures for Context-based Adaptive Binary Arithmetic Coding (CABAC) of Main and High profiles of H.264/AVC. The purpose of the survey is to deliver a critical insight in the proposed solutions, and this way facilitate further research on accelerator architectures, architecture development methods and supporting EDA tools. The architectures are analyzed, classified and compared based on the core hardware acceleration concepts, algorithmic characteristics, video resolution support and performance parameters, and some promising design directions are discussed. The comparative analysis shows that the parallel pipeline accelerator architecture seems to be the most promising

    Survey of advanced CABAC accelarator architectures for future multimedia.

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    The future high quality multimedia systems require efficient video coding algorithms and corresponding adaptive high-performance computational platforms. In this paper, we survey the hardware accelerator architectures for Context-based Adaptive Binary Arithmetic Coding (CABAC) of H.264/AVC. The purpose of the survey is to deliver a critical insight in the proposed solutions, and this way facilitate further research on accelerator architectures, architecture development methods and supporting EDA tools. The architectures are analyzed, classified and compared based on the core hardware acceleration concepts, algorithmic characteristics, video resolution support and performance parameters, and some promising design directions are discussed

    Motion estimation and CABAC VLSI co-processors for real-time high-quality H.264/AVC video coding

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    Real-time and high-quality video coding is gaining a wide interest in the research and industrial community for different applications. H.264/AVC, a recent standard for high performance video coding, can be successfully exploited in several scenarios including digital video broadcasting, high-definition TV and DVD-based systems, which require to sustain up to tens of Mbits/s. To that purpose this paper proposes optimized architectures for H.264/AVC most critical tasks, Motion estimation and context adaptive binary arithmetic coding. Post synthesis results on sub-micron CMOS standard-cells technologies show that the proposed architectures can actually process in real-time 720 × 480 video sequences at 30 frames/s and grant more than 50 Mbits/s. The achieved circuit complexity and power consumption budgets are suitable for their integration in complex VLSI multimedia systems based either on AHB bus centric on-chip communication system or on novel Network-on-Chip (NoC) infrastructures for MPSoC (Multi-Processor System on Chip

    A Deeply Pipelined CABAC Decoder for HEVC Supporting Level 6.2 High-tier Applications

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    High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) is the latest video coding standard that specifies video resolutions up to 8K Ultra-HD (UHD) at 120 fps to support the next decade of video applications. This results in high-throughput requirements for the context adaptive binary arithmetic coding (CABAC) entropy decoder, which was already a well-known bottleneck in H.264/AVC. To address the throughput challenges, several modifications were made to CABAC during the standardization of HEVC. This work leverages these improvements in the design of a high-throughput HEVC CABAC decoder. It also supports the high-level parallel processing tools introduced by HEVC, including tile and wavefront parallel processing. The proposed design uses a deeply pipelined architecture to achieve a high clock rate. Additional techniques such as the state prefetch logic, latched-based context memory, and separate finite state machines are applied to minimize stall cycles, while multibypass- bin decoding is used to further increase the throughput. The design is implemented in an IBM 45nm SOI process. After place-and-route, its operating frequency reaches 1.6 GHz. The corresponding throughputs achieve up to 1696 and 2314 Mbin/s under common and theoretical worst-case test conditions, respectively. The results show that the design is sufficient to decode in real-time high-tier video bitstreams at level 6.2 (8K UHD at 120 fps), or main-tier bitstreams at level 5.1 (4K UHD at 60 fps) for applications requiring sub-frame latency, such as video conferencing

    Joint Algorithm-Architecture Optimization of CABAC

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    This paper uses joint algorithm and architecture design to enable high coding efficiency in conjunction with high processing speed and low area cost. Specifically, it presents several optimizations that can be performed on Context Adaptive Binary Arithmetic Coding (CABAC), a form of entropy coding used in H.264/AVC, to achieve the throughput necessary for real-time low power high definition video coding. The combination of syntax element partitions and interleaved entropy slices, referred to as Massively Parallel CABAC, increases the number of binary symbols that can be processed in a cycle. Subinterval reordering is used to reduce the cycle time required to process each binary symbol. Under common conditions using the JM12.0 software, the Massively Parallel CABAC, increases the bins per cycle by 2.7 to 32.8× at a cost of 0.25 to 6.84% coding loss compared with sequential single slice H.264/AVC CABAC. It also provides a 2× reduction in area cost, and reduces memory bandwidth. Subinterval reordering reduces the critical path delay by 14 to 22%, while modifications to context selection reduces the memory requirement by 67%. This work demonstrates that accounting for implementation cost during video coding algorithms design can enable higher processing speed and reduce hardware cost, while still delivering high coding efficiency in the next generation video coding standard.Texas Instruments Incorporated (Graduate Women's Fellowship for Leadership in Microelectronics)Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canad

    Decoder Hardware Architecture for HEVC

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    This chapter provides an overview of the design challenges faced in the implementation of hardware HEVC decoders. These challenges can be attributed to the larger and diverse coding block sizes and transform sizes, the larger interpolation filter for motion compensation, the increased number of steps in intra prediction and the introduction of a new in-loop filter. Several solutions to address these implementation challenges are discussed. As a reference, results for an HEVC decoder test chip are also presented.Texas Instruments Incorporate

    Parallel algorithms and architectures for low power video decoding

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2010.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 197-204).Parallelism coupled with voltage scaling is an effective approach to achieve high processing performance with low power consumption. This thesis presents parallel architectures and algorithms designed to deliver the power and performance required for current and next generation video coding. Coding efficiency, area cost and scalability are also addressed. First, a low power video decoder is presented for the current state-of-the-art video coding standard H.264/AVC. Parallel architectures are used along with voltage scaling to deliver high definition (HD) decoding at low power levels. Additional architectural optimizations such as reducing memory accesses and multiple frequency/voltage domains are also described. An H.264/AVC Baseline decoder test chip was fabricated in 65-nm CMOS. It can operate at 0.7 V for HD (720p, 30 fps) video decoding and with a measured power of 1.8 mW. The highly scalable decoder can tradeoff power and performance across >100x range. Second, this thesis demonstrates how serial algorithms, such as Context-based Adaptive Binary Arithmetic Coding (CABAC), can be redesigned for parallel architectures to enable high throughput with low coding efficiency cost. A parallel algorithm called the Massively Parallel CABAC (MP-CABAC) is presented that uses syntax element partitions and interleaved entropy slices to achieve better throughput-coding efficiency and throughput-area tradeoffs than H.264/AVC. The parallel algorithm also improves scalability by providing a third dimension to tradeoff coding efficiency for power and performance. Finally, joint algorithm-architecture optimizations are used to increase performance and reduce area with almost no coding penalty. The MP-CABAC is mapped to a highly parallel architecture with 80 parallel engines, which together delivers >10x higher throughput than existing H.264/AVC CABAC implementations. A MP-CABAC test chip was fabricated in 65-nm CMOS to demonstrate the power-performance-coding efficiency tradeoff.by Vivienne. Sze.Ph.D

    System-on-Chip design of a high performance low power full hardware cabac encoder in H.264/AVC

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Video Compression from the Hardware Perspective

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    Efficient architectures of heterogeneous fpga-gpu for 3-d medical image compression

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    The advent of development in three-dimensional (3-D) imaging modalities have generated a massive amount of volumetric data in 3-D images such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography (CT), positron emission tomography (PET), and ultrasound (US). Existing survey reveals the presence of a huge gap for further research in exploiting reconfigurable computing for 3-D medical image compression. This research proposes an FPGA based co-processing solution to accelerate the mentioned medical imaging system. The HWT block implemented on the sbRIO-9632 FPGA board is Spartan 3 (XC3S2000) chip prototyping board. Analysis and performance evaluation of the 3-D images were been conducted. Furthermore, a novel architecture of context-based adaptive binary arithmetic coder (CABAC) is the advanced entropy coding tool employed by main and higher profiles of H.264/AVC. This research focuses on GPU implementation of CABAC and comparative study of discrete wavelet transform (DWT) and without DWT for 3-D medical image compression systems. Implementation results on MRI and CT images, showing GPU significantly outperforming single-threaded CPU implementation. Overall, CT and MRI modalities with DWT outperform in term of compression ratio, peak signal to noise ratio (PSNR) and latency compared with images without DWT process. For heterogeneous computing, MRI images with various sizes and format, such as JPEG and DICOM was implemented. Evaluation results are shown for each memory iteration, transfer sizes from GPU to CPU consuming more bandwidth or throughput. For size 786, 486 bytes JPEG format, both directions consumed bandwidth tend to balance. Bandwidth is relative to the transfer size, the larger sizing will take more latency and throughput. Next, OpenCL implementation for concurrent task via dedicated FPGA. Finding from implementation reveals, OpenCL on batch procession mode with AOC techniques offers substantial results where the amount of logic, area, register and memory increased proportionally to the number of batch. It is because of the kernel will copy the kernel block refer to batch number. Therefore memory bank increased periodically related to kernel block. It was found through comparative study that the tree balance and unroll loop architecture provides better achievement, in term of local memory, latency and throughput
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