3 research outputs found

    Comparaison de strategies de calcul de bornes sur NoC

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    The Kalray MPPA2-256 processor integrates 256 processing cores and 32 management cores on a chip. Theses cores are grouped into clusters, and clusters are connected by a high-performance network on chip (NoC). This NoC provides some hardware mechanisms (egress traffic limiters) that can be configured to offer bounded latencies. This paper presents how network calculus can be used to bound these latencies while computing the routes of data flows, using linear programming. Then, its shows how other approaches can also be used and adapted to analyze this NoC. Their performances are then compared on three case studies: two small coming from previous studies, and one realistic with 128 or 256 flows. On theses cases studies, it shows that modeling the shaping introduced by links is of major importance to get accurate bounds. And when packets are of constant size, the Total Flow Analysis gives, on average, bounds 20%-25% smaller than all other methods

    Computing Accurate Performance Bounds for Best Effort Networks-on-Chip

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    Real-time (RT) communication support is a critical requirement for many complex embedded applications which are currently targeted to Network-on-chip (NoC) platforms. In this paper, we present novel methods to efficiently calculate worst- case bandwidth and latency bounds for RT traffic streams on wormhole-switched NoCs with arbitrary topology. The proposed methods apply to best-effort NoC architectures, with no extra hardware dedicated to RT traffic support. By applying our methods to several realistic NoC designs, we show substantial improvements (more than 30% in bandwidth and 50% in latency, on average) in bound tightness with respect to existing approaches
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