464 research outputs found

    From FPGA to ASIC: A RISC-V processor experience

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    This work document a correct design flow using these tools in the Lagarto RISC- V Processor and the RTL design considerations that must be taken into account, to move from a design for FPGA to design for ASIC

    Performance Aspects of Synthesizable Computing Systems

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    A study of FPGA-based System-on-Chip designs for real-time industrial application

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    This paper shows the benefits of the Field Programming Gate Array (FPGAs) in industrial control applications. The author starts by addressing the benefits of FPGA and where it is useful. As well as, the author has done some FPGA’s evaluation researches on the FPGA performing explaining the performance of the FPGA and the design tools. To show the benefits of the FPGA, an industrial application example has been used. The application is a real-time face detection and tracking using FPGA. Face tracking will depend on calculating the centroid of each detected region. A DE2-SoC Altera board has been used to implement this application. The application based on few algorithms that filter the captured images to detect them. These algorithms have been translated to a Verilog code to run it on the DE2-SoC boar

    A CAD Tool for Synthesizing Optimized Variants of Altera\u27s Nios II Soft-Core Processor

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    Soft-core processors offer embedded system designers the benefits of customization, flexibility and reusability. Altera\u27s NIOS II soft-core processor is a popular, commercially available soft-core processor that can be implemented on a variety of Altera FPGAs. In this thesis, the Nios II soft-core processor from Altera Corporation was studied and a VHDL implementation, called UW_Nios II, was developed. UW_Nios II was developed to enable us to perform design space exploration (DSE) for the Nios II processor. It was evaluated and compared with Altera Nios II and shown to be competitive. SCBuild is an existing CAD tool that was developed to enable DSE of soft-core processors. We modified SCBuild to automatically explore the design space of the UW_Nios II using a genetic algorithm. This tool can accurately estimate the area and critical path delay of different variants of the UW_Nios II on a field programmable gate array. Through experiments conducted using SCBuild, it was shown that employing a genetic algorithm to explore the design space of parameterized Nios II core, with a large design space, helps designers find optimized variants of UW_Nios II

    The review of heterogeneous design frameworks/Platforms for digital systems embedded in FPGAs and SoCs

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    Systems-on-a-chip integrate specialized modules to provide well-defined functionality. In order to guarantee its efficiency, designersare careful to choose high-level electronic components. In particular,FPGAs (field-programmable gate array) have demonstrated theirability to meet the requirements of emerging technology. However,traditional design methods cannot keep up with the speed andefficiency imposed by the embedded systems industry, so severalframeworks have been developed to simplify the design process of anelectronic system, from its modeling to its physical implementation.This paper illustrates some of them and presents a comparative studybetween them. Indeed, we have selected design methods of SoC(ESP4ML and HLS4ML, OpenESP, LiteX, RubyRTL, PyMTL,SysPy, PyRTL, DSSoC) and NoC networks on OCN chip (PyOCN)and in general on FPGA (PRGA, OpenFPGA, AnyHLS, PYNQ, andPyLog).The objective of this article is to analyze each tool at several levelsand to discuss the benefit of each in the scientific community. Wewill analyze several aspects constituting the architecture and thestructure of the platforms to make a comparative study of thehardware and software design flows of digital systems.

    Multiprocessor platform using LEON3 processor

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    The recent advances in embedded systems world, lead us to more complex systems with application specific blocks (IP cores), the System on Chip (SoC) devices. A good example of these complex devices can be encountered in the cell phones that can have image processing cores, communication cores, memory card cores, and others. The need of augmenting systems’ processing performance with lowest power, leads to a concept of Multiprocessor System on Chip (MSoC) in which the execution of multiple tasks can be distributed along various processors. This thesis intends to address the creation of a synthesizable multiprocessing system to be placed in a FPGA device, providing a good flexibility to tailor the system to a specific application. To deliver a multiprocessing system, will be used the synthesisable 32-bit SPARC V8 compliant, LEON3 processor.Os avanços recentes no mundo dos sistemas embebidos levam-nos a sistemas mais complexos com blocos para aplicações específicas (IP cores), os dispositivos System on Chip (SoC). Um bom exemplo destes complexos dispositivos pode ser encontrado nos telemóveis, que podem conter cores de processamento de imagem, cores de comunicações, cores para cartões de memória, entre outros. A necessidade de aumentar o desempenho dos sistemas de processamento com o menor consumo possível, leva ao conceito de Multiprocessor System on Chip (MSoC) em que a execução de múltiplas tarefas pode ser distribuída por vários processadores. Esta Tese pretende abordar a criação de um sistema de multiprocessamento sintetizável para ser colocado numa FPGA, proporcionando uma boa flexibilidade para a adaptação do sistema a uma aplicação específica. Para obter o sistema multiprocessamento, irá ser utilizado o processador sintetizável SPARC V8 de 32-bit, LEON3

    Case Study: First-Time Success ASIC Design Methodology Applied to a Multi-Processor System-on-Chip

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    Achieving first-time success is crucial in the ASIC design league considering the soaring cost, tight time-to-market window, and competitive business environment. One key factor in ensuring first-time success is a well-defined ASIC design methodology. Here we propose a novel ASIC design methodology that has been proven for the RUMPS401 (Rahman University Multi-Processor System 401) Multiprocessor System-on-Chip (MPSoC) project. The MPSoC project is initiated by Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman (UTAR) VLSI design center. The proposed methodology includes the use of Universal Verification Methodology (UVM). The use of electronic design automation (EDA) software during each step of the design methodology is also presented. The first-time success RUMPS401 demonstrates the use of the proposed ASIC design methodology and the good of using one. Especially this project is carried on in educational environment that is even more limited in budget, resources and know-how, compared to the business and industrial counterparts. Here a novel ASIC design methodology that is tailored to first-time success MPSoC is presented

    FPGAs in Industrial Control Applications

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    The aim of this paper is to review the state-of-the-art of Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) technologies and their contribution to industrial control applications. Authors start by addressing various research fields which can exploit the advantages of FPGAs. The features of these devices are then presented, followed by their corresponding design tools. To illustrate the benefits of using FPGAs in the case of complex control applications, a sensorless motor controller has been treated. This controller is based on the Extended Kalman Filter. Its development has been made according to a dedicated design methodology, which is also discussed. The use of FPGAs to implement artificial intelligence-based industrial controllers is then briefly reviewed. The final section presents two short case studies of Neural Network control systems designs targeting FPGAs

    High Peformance and Low Power On-Die Interconnect Fabrics.

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    Increasing power density with technology scaling has caused stagnation in operating frequency of modern day microprocessors. This has led designers to prefer multicore architectures over complex monolithic processors to keep up with the demand for rising computing throughput. Although processing units are getting smaller and simpler, the dramatic rise of their count on a single die has made the fabric that connects these processing units increasingly complex. These interconnect fabrics have become a bottleneck in improving overall system effciency. As a result, the design paradigm for multi-core chips is gradually shifting from a core-centric architecture towards an interconnect-centric architecture, where system efficiency is limited by the fabric rather than the processing ability of any individual core. This dissertation introduces three novel and synergistic circuit techniques to improve scalability of switch fabrics to make on-die integration of hundreds to thousands of cores feasible. 1) A matrix topology is proposed for designing a fully connected switch fabric that re-uses output buses for programming, and stores shue congurations at cross points. This significantly reduces routing congestion, lowers area/power, and improves per- formance. Silicon measurements demonstrate 47% energy savings in a 64-lane SIMD processor fabricated in 65nm CMOS over a conventional implementation. 2) A novel approach to handle high radix arbitration along with data routing is proposed. It optimally uses existing cross-bar interconnect resources without requiring any additional overhead. Bandwidth exceeding 2Tb/s is recorded in a test prototype fabricated in 65nm. 3) Building on the later, a new circuit topology to manage and update priority adaptively within the switch fabric without incurring additional delay or area is then proposed. Several assist circuit techniques, such as a thyristor based sense amplifier and self regenerating bi-directional repeaters are proposed for high speed energy efficient signaling to and from the switch fabric to improve overall routing efficiency. Using these techniques a 64 x 64 switch fabric with 128b data bus fabricated in 45nm achieves a throughput of 4.5Tb/s at single cycle latency while operating at 559MHz.Ph.D.Electrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/91506/1/sudhirks_1.pd
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