2 research outputs found

    High-level synthesis algorithm for the design of reconfigurable constant multiplier

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    Multiplying a signal by a known constant is an essential operation in digital signal processing algorithms. In many application scenarios, an input or output signal is repeatedly multiplied by several predefined constants at different instances. These temporal redundancies can be exploited for the design of an efficient reconfigurable constant multiplier (RCM). An RCM achieves greater hardware savings than the conventional multiple constant multiplication architecture, limited only by the available latency of the subsystem. Motivated by a number of lucrative examples, this paper presents a new high-level design methodology for RCM. Common subexpressions in the preset constants represented in minimum signed-digit system are first eliminated to obtain a minimum depth multiroot directed acyclic graph (DAG). The DAG is converted into a primitive data flow graph (DFG) where mobile adders are identified. By scheduling each mobile adder into a control step within its legitimate time window with the minimum opportunity cost, mutually exclusive adders can be merged with significantly reduced adder and multiplexing cost. The opportunity cost for each scheduling decision is assessed by the probability displacement and disparity measures of the scheduled node as well as its predecessors and successors in the DFG. The algorithm is runtime efficient as exhaustive search for the best fusion of independently optimized constant multipliers has been avoided. Simulation results on randomly generated 12-b constant sets show that the solutions generated by the proposed algorithm are on average 19% to 25% more area–time efficient than the best reported solutions.Published versio

    High-Level Synthesis Algorithm for the Design of Reconfigurable Constant Multiplier

    No full text
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