8,491 research outputs found
Modeling and Energy Optimization of LDPC Decoder Circuits with Timing Violations
This paper proposes a "quasi-synchronous" design approach for signal
processing circuits, in which timing violations are permitted, but without the
need for a hardware compensation mechanism. The case of a low-density
parity-check (LDPC) decoder is studied, and a method for accurately modeling
the effect of timing violations at a high level of abstraction is presented.
The error-correction performance of code ensembles is then evaluated using
density evolution while taking into account the effect of timing faults.
Following this, several quasi-synchronous LDPC decoder circuits based on the
offset min-sum algorithm are optimized, providing a 23%-40% reduction in energy
consumption or energy-delay product, while achieving the same performance and
occupying the same area as conventional synchronous circuits.Comment: To appear in IEEE Transactions on Communication
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VSS : a VHDL synthesis system
This report describes a register transfer synthesis system that allows a designer to interact with the design process. The designer can modify the compiled design by changing the input description, selecting optimization and mapping strategies, or graphically changing the generated design schematic. The VHDL language is used for input and output descriptions. An intermediate representation which incorporates signal typing and component attributes simplifies compilation and facilitates design optimization. The compilation process consists of two phases. First, a design composed of generic components is synthesized from the input description. Second, this design is translated into components from a particular library by a mapper and optimized by a logic optimizer. Redesign to new technologies can be accomplished by changing only the component library
Ring oscillator clocks and margins
How much margin do we have to add to the delay lines of a bundled-data circuit? This paper is an attempt to give a methodical answer to this question, taking into account all sources of variability and the existing EDA machinery for timing analysis and sign-off. The paper is based on the study of the margins of a ring oscillator that substitutes a PLL as clock generator. A timing model is proposed that shows that a 12% margin for delay lines can be sufficient to cover variability in a 65nm technology. In a typical scenario, performance and energy improvements between 15% and 35% can be obtained by using a ring oscillator instead of a PLL. The paper concludes that a synchronous circuit with a ring oscillator clock shows similar benefits in performance and energy as those of bundled-data asynchronous circuits.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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Structured modeling for VHDL synthesis
This report will describe a proposed modeling style for the use of the VHSIC Hardware Description Language (VHDL) in design synthesis. We will describe the operations and underlying assumptions of four design models currently understood and used in practice by designers: combinational logic, functional descriptions (involving clocked components such as counters), register transfer (data path) descriptions, and behavioral (instruction set or processor) designs. We will illustrate the various uses of the VHDL description styles (structural, dataflow and behavioral) to represent characteristics of each of these design models. Emphasis is placed on how VHDL constructs should be used in order to synthesize optimal designs
PieceTimer: A Holistic Timing Analysis Framework Considering Setup/Hold Time Interdependency Using A Piecewise Model
In static timing analysis, clock-to-q delays of flip-flops are considered as
constants. Setup times and hold times are characterized separately and also
used as constants. The characterized delays, setup times and hold times, are
ap- plied in timing analysis independently to verify the perfor- mance of
circuits. In reality, however, clock-to-q delays of flip-flops depend on both
setup and hold times. Instead of being constants, these delays change with
respect to different setup/hold time combinations. Consequently, the simple ab-
straction of setup/hold times and constant clock-to-q delays introduces
inaccuracy in timing analysis. In this paper, we propose a holistic method to
consider the relation between clock-to-q delays and setup/hold time
combinations with a piecewise linear model. The result is more accurate than
that of traditional timing analysis, and the incorporation of the
interdependency between clock-to-q delays, setup times and hold times may also
improve circuit performance.Comment: IEEE/ACM International Conference on Computer-Aided Design (ICCAD),
November 201
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Behavioral synthesis from VHDL using structured modeling
This dissertation describes work in behavioral synthesis involving the development of a VHDL Synthesis System VSS which accepts a VHDL behavioral input specification and performs technology independent synthesis to generate a circuit netlist of generic components. The VHDL language is used for input and output descriptions. An intermediate representation which incorporates signal typing and component attributes simplifies compilation and facilitates design optimization.A Structured Modeling methodology has been developed to suggest standard VHDL modeling practices for synthesis. Structured modeling provides recommendations for the use of available VHDL description styles so that optimal designs will be synthesized.A design composed of generic components is synthesized from the input description through a process of Graph Compilation, Graph Criticism, and Design Compilation. Experiments were performed to demonstrate the effects of different modeling styles on the quality of the design produced by VSS. Several alternative VHDL models were examined for each benchmark, illustrating the improvements in design quality achieved when Structured Modeling guidelines were followed
Synthesis of all-digital delay lines
© 2017 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other worksThe synthesis of delay lines (DLs) is a core task during the generation of matched delays, ring oscillator clocks or delay monitors. The main figure of merit of a DL is the fidelity to track variability. Unfortunately, complex systems have a great diversity of timing paths that exhibit different sensitivities to static and dynamic variations. Designing DLs that capture this diversity is an ardous task. This paper proposes an algorithmic approach for the synthesis of DLs that can be integrated in a conventional design flow. The algorithm uses heuristics to perform a combinatorial search in a vast space of solutions that combine different types of gates and wire lengths. The synthesized DLs are (1) all digital, i.e., built of conventional standard cells, (2) accurate in tracking variability and (3) configurable at runtime. Experimental results with a commercial standard cell library confirm the quality of the DLs that only exhibit delay mismatches of about 1% on average over all PVT corners.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
An Energy-Efficient Reconfigurable Circuit Switched Network-on-Chip
Network-on-Chip (NoC) is an energy-efficient on-chip communication architecture for multi-tile System-on-Chip (SoC) architectures. The SoC architecture, including its run-time software, can replace inflexible ASICs for future ambient systems. These ambient systems have to be flexible as well as energy-efficient. To find an energy-efficient solution for the communication network we analyze three wireless applications. Based on their communication requirements we observe that revisiting of the circuit switching techniques is beneficial. In this paper we propose a new energy-efficient reconfigurable circuit-switched Network-on-Chip. By physically separating the concurrent data streams we reduce the overall energy consumption. The circuit-switched router has been synthesized and analyzed for its power consumption in 0.13 ¿m technology. A 5-port circuit-switched router has an area of 0.05 mm2 and runs at 1075 MHz. The proposed architecture consumes 3.5 times less energy compared to its packet-switched equivalen
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Benchmarking for high-level synthesis
This paper discusses issues in benchmarking for synthesis, and suggests techniques for the comparison of benchmark descriptions, the synthesis tools used, as well as the synthesized designs finally generated. We propose a classification scheme for the assumptions made for the comparison of different synthesis tools, and present an Assumptions Chart that can be used to visualize different benchmarks, tools and synthesis results. We illustrate application of this Assumptions Chart using synthesis experiments that were conducted on some sample High-Level Synthesis Workshop bench-marks
From FPGA to ASIC: A RISC-V processor experience
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
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