71 research outputs found

    On-line defragmentation for run-time partially reconfigurable FPGAs

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    Dynamically reconfigurable systems have benefited from a new class of FPGAs recently introduced into the market, which allow partial and dynamic reconfiguration at run time, enabling multiple independent processes from different applications to share the same device, swapping them as needed. When the sequence of tasks to be performed is not predictable, resource allocation decisions have to be made online, producing fragmentation of the FPGA logic space. A rearrangement may be necessary to get enough contiguous space to efficiently implement new incoming processes, avoiding the spreading of their components and, as a result, the degradation of their performance. This paper presents a novel active replication mechanism for configurable logic blocks (CLBs), able to implement online rearrangements, defragmenting the available FPGA resources without disturbing currently running processes

    An Efficient Data Structure for Dynamic Two-Dimensional Reconfiguration

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    In the presence of dynamic insertions and deletions into a partially reconfigurable FPGA, fragmentation is unavoidable. This poses the challenge of developing efficient approaches to dynamic defragmentation and reallocation. One key aspect is to develop efficient algorithms and data structures that exploit the two-dimensional geometry of a chip, instead of just one. We propose a new method for this task, based on the fractal structure of a quadtree, which allows dynamic segmentation of the chip area, along with dynamically adjusting the necessary communication infrastructure. We describe a number of algorithmic aspects, and present different solutions. We also provide a number of basic simulations that indicate that the theoretical worst-case bound may be pessimistic.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures; full version of extended abstract that appeared in ARCS 201

    Configuration prefetching techniques for partial reconfigurable coprocessor with relocation and defragmentation

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    Task scheduling and placement for reconfigurable devices

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    Partially reconfigurable devices allow the execution of different tasks at the same time, removing tasks when they finish and inserting new tasks when they arrive. This dissertation investigates scheduling and placing real-time tasks (tasks with deadline) on reconfigurable devices. One basic scheduler is the First-Fit scheduler. By allowing the First-Fit scheduler to retry tasks while they can satisfy their deadlines, we found that its performance can be enhanced to be better than other schedulers. We also proposed a placement idea based on partitioning the reconfigurable area into regions of various widths, assigning a task to a region based on its width. This idea has a similar rejection rate to a First-Fit scheduler that retries placing tasks and performs better than the First-Fit that does not retry tasks. Also, this regions-based scheduling method has a better running time. Managing how the space will be shared among tasks is a problems of interest. The main function of the free-space manager is to maintain information about the free space (areas not used by active tasks) after any placement or deletion of a task. Speed and efficiency of the free-space data structure are important as well as its effect on scheduler performance. We introduce the use of maximal horizontal strips and maximal vertical strips to represent free space. This resulted in a faster free space manager compared to what has been used in the area. Most researchers in the area of scheduling on reconfigurable devices assumed a homogeneous FPGA with only CLBs in the reconfigurable area. Most reconfigurable devices offered in the market, however, are not homogeneous but heterogeneous with other components between CLBs. We studied the effect of heterogeneity on the performance of schedulers designed for a homogeneous structure. We found that current schedulers result in worse performance when applied to a heterogeneous structure, but by simple modifications, we can apply them to a heterogeneous structure and achieve good performance. Consequently, the approach of studying homogeneous FPGAs is a valid one, as the scheduling ideas discovered there do carry over to heterogeneous FPGAs

    Run-time management of logic resources on reconfigurable systems

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    Dynamically reconfigurable systems based on partialand dynamically reconfigurable FPGAs may have theirfunctionality partially modified at run-time withoutstopping the operation of the whole system.The efficient management of the logic space availableis one of the biggest problems faced by these systems.When the sequence of reconfigurations to be performed isnot predictable, resource allocation decisions have to bemade on-line. A rearrangement may be necessary to getenough contiguous space to implement incomingfunctions, avoiding the spreading of their components andthe resulting degradation of system performance.A new software tool that helps to handle the problemsposed by the consecutive reconfiguration of the same logicspace is presented in this paper. This tool uses a novel on--line rearrangement procedure to solve fragmentationproblems and to rearrange the logic space in a waycompletely transparent to the applications currentlyrunnin

    Runtime Scheduling, Allocation, and Execution of Real-Time Hardware Tasks onto Xilinx FPGAs Subject to Fault Occurrence

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    This paper describes a novel way to exploit the computation capabilities delivered by modern Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), not only towards a higher performance, but also towards an improved reliability. Computation-specific pieces of circuitry are dynamically scheduled and allocated to different resources on the chip based on a set of novel algorithms which are described in detail in this article. These algorithms consider most of the technological constraints existing in modern partially reconfigurable FPGAs as well as spontaneously occurring faults and emerging permanent damage in the silicon substrate of the chip. In addition, the algorithms target other important aspects such as communications and synchronization among the different computations that are carried out, either concurrently or at different times. The effectiveness of the proposed algorithms is tested by means of a wide range of synthetic simulations, and, notably, a proof-of-concept implementation of them using real FPGA hardware is outlined

    A Multi-layer Fpga Framework Supporting Autonomous Runtime Partial Reconfiguration

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    Partial reconfiguration is a unique capability provided by several Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) vendors recently, which involves altering part of the programmed design within an SRAM-based FPGA at run-time. In this dissertation, a Multilayer Runtime Reconfiguration Architecture (MRRA) is developed, evaluated, and refined for Autonomous Runtime Partial Reconfiguration of FPGA devices. Under the proposed MRRA paradigm, FPGA configurations can be manipulated at runtime using on-chip resources. Operations are partitioned into Logic, Translation, and Reconfiguration layers along with a standardized set of Application Programming Interfaces (APIs). At each level, resource details are encapsulated and managed for efficiency and portability during operation. An MRRA mapping theory is developed to link the general logic function and area allocation information to the device related physical configuration level data by using mathematical data structure and physical constraints. In certain scenarios, configuration bit stream data can be read and modified directly for fast operations, relying on the use of similar logic functions and common interconnection resources for communication. A corresponding logic control flow is also developed to make the entire process autonomous. Several prototype MRRA systems are developed on a Xilinx Virtex II Pro platform. The Virtex II Pro on-chip PowerPC core and block RAM are employed to manage control operations while multiple physical interfaces establish and supplement autonomous reconfiguration capabilities. Area, speed and power optimization techniques are developed based on the developed Xilinx prototype. Evaluations and analysis of these prototype and techniques are performed on a number of benchmark and hashing algorithm case studies. The results indicate that based on a variety of test benches, up to 70% reduction in the resource utilization, up to 50% improvement in power consumption, and up to 10 times increase in run-time performance are achieved using the developed architecture and approaches compared with Xilinx baseline reconfiguration flow. Finally, a Genetic Algorithm (GA) for a FPGA fault tolerance case study is evaluated as a ultimate high-level application running on this architecture. It demonstrated that this is a hardware and software infrastructure that enables an FPGA to dynamically reconfigure itself efficiently under the control of a soft microprocessor core that is instantiated within the FPGA fabric. Such a system contributes to the observed benefits of intelligent control, fast reconfiguration, and low overhead

    Parallel and Distributed Computing

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    The 14 chapters presented in this book cover a wide variety of representative works ranging from hardware design to application development. Particularly, the topics that are addressed are programmable and reconfigurable devices and systems, dependability of GPUs (General Purpose Units), network topologies, cache coherence protocols, resource allocation, scheduling algorithms, peertopeer networks, largescale network simulation, and parallel routines and algorithms. In this way, the articles included in this book constitute an excellent reference for engineers and researchers who have particular interests in each of these topics in parallel and distributed computing

    A Hardware Task-Graph Scheduler for Reconfigurable Multi-tasking Systems

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    Reconfigurable hardware can be used to build a multitasking system where tasks are assigned to HW resources at run-time according to the requirements of the running applications. These tasks are frequently represented as direct acyclic graphs and their execution is typically controlled by an embedded processor that schedules the graph execution. In order to improve the efficiency of the system, the scheduler can apply prefetch and reuse techniques that can greatly reduce the reconfiguration latencies. For an embedded processor all these computations represent a heavy computational load that can significantly reduce the system performance. To overcome this problem we have implemented a HW scheduler using reconfigurable resources. In addition we have implemented both prefetch and replacement techniques that obtain as good results as previous complex SW approaches, while demanding just a few clock cycles to carry out the computations. We consider that the HW cost of the system (in our experiments 3% of a Virtex-II PRO xc2vp30 FPGA) is affordable taking into account the great efficiency of the techniques applied to hide the reconfiguration latency and the negligible run-time penalty introduced by the scheduler computations
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