3,473 research outputs found
Design exploration and performance strategies towards power-efficient FPGA-based achitectures for sound source localization
Many applications rely on MEMS microphone arrays for locating sound sources prior to their execution. Those applications not only are executed under real-time constraints but also are often embedded on low-power devices. These environments become challenging when increasing the number of microphones or requiring dynamic responses. Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) are usually chosen due to their flexibility and computational power. This work intends to guide the design of reconfigurable acoustic beamforming architectures, which are not only able to accurately determine the sound Direction-Of-Arrival (DoA) but also capable to satisfy the most demanding applications in terms of power efficiency. Design considerations of the required operations performing the sound location are discussed and analysed in order to facilitate the elaboration of reconfigurable acoustic beamforming architectures. Performance strategies are proposed and evaluated based on the characteristics of the presented architecture. This power-efficient architecture is compared to a different architecture prioritizing performance in order to reveal the unavoidable design trade-offs
Evaluating Built-in ECC of FPGA on-chip Memories for the Mitigation of Undervolting Faults
Voltage underscaling below the nominal level is an effective solution for
improving energy efficiency in digital circuits, e.g., Field Programmable Gate
Arrays (FPGAs). However, further undervolting below a safe voltage level and
without accompanying frequency scaling leads to timing related faults,
potentially undermining the energy savings. Through experimental voltage
underscaling studies on commercial FPGAs, we observed that the rate of these
faults exponentially increases for on-chip memories, or Block RAMs (BRAMs). To
mitigate these faults, we evaluated the efficiency of the built-in
Error-Correction Code (ECC) and observed that more than 90% of the faults are
correctable and further 7% are detectable (but not correctable). This
efficiency is the result of the single-bit type of these faults, which are then
effectively covered by the Single-Error Correction and Double-Error Detection
(SECDED) design of the built-in ECC. Finally, motivated by the above
experimental observations, we evaluated an FPGA-based Neural Network (NN)
accelerator under low-voltage operations, while built-in ECC is leveraged to
mitigate undervolting faults and thus, prevent NN significant accuracy loss. In
consequence, we achieve 40% of the BRAM power saving through undervolting below
the minimum safe voltage level, with a negligible NN accuracy loss, thanks to
the substantial fault coverage by the built-in ECC.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Autonomous Recovery Of Reconfigurable Logic Devices Using Priority Escalation Of Slack
Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) devices offer a suitable platform for survivable hardware architectures in mission-critical systems. In this dissertation, active dynamic redundancy-based fault-handling techniques are proposed which exploit the dynamic partial reconfiguration capability of SRAM-based FPGAs. Self-adaptation is realized by employing reconfiguration in detection, diagnosis, and recovery phases. To extend these concepts to semiconductor aging and process variation in the deep submicron era, resilient adaptable processing systems are sought to maintain quality and throughput requirements despite the vulnerabilities of the underlying computational devices. A new approach to autonomous fault-handling which addresses these goals is developed using only a uniplex hardware arrangement. It operates by observing a health metric to achieve Fault Demotion using Recon- figurable Slack (FaDReS). Here an autonomous fault isolation scheme is employed which neither requires test vectors nor suspends the computational throughput, but instead observes the value of a health metric based on runtime input. The deterministic flow of the fault isolation scheme guarantees success in a bounded number of reconfigurations of the FPGA fabric. FaDReS is then extended to the Priority Using Resource Escalation (PURE) online redundancy scheme which considers fault-isolation latency and throughput trade-offs under a dynamic spare arrangement. While deep-submicron designs introduce new challenges, use of adaptive techniques are seen to provide several promising avenues for improving resilience. The scheme developed is demonstrated by hardware design of various signal processing circuits and their implementation on a Xilinx Virtex-4 FPGA device. These include a Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT) core, Motion Estimation (ME) engine, Finite Impulse Response (FIR) Filter, Support Vector Machine (SVM), and Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) blocks in addition to MCNC benchmark circuits. A iii significant reduction in power consumption is achieved ranging from 83% for low motion-activity scenes to 12.5% for high motion activity video scenes in a novel ME engine configuration. For a typical benchmark video sequence, PURE is shown to maintain a PSNR baseline near 32dB. The diagnosability, reconfiguration latency, and resource overhead of each approach is analyzed. Compared to previous alternatives, PURE maintains a PSNR within a difference of 4.02dB to 6.67dB from the fault-free baseline by escalating healthy resources to higher-priority signal processing functions. The results indicate the benefits of priority-aware resiliency over conventional redundancy approaches in terms of fault-recovery, power consumption, and resource-area requirements. Together, these provide a broad range of strategies to achieve autonomous recovery of reconfigurable logic devices under a variety of constraints, operating conditions, and optimization criteria
Hybrid FPGA: Architecture and Interface
Hybrid FPGAs (Field Programmable Gate Arrays) are composed of general-purpose logic resources
with different granularities, together with domain-specific coarse-grained units. This thesis proposes
a novel hybrid FPGA architecture with embedded coarse-grained Floating Point Units (FPUs) to
improve the floating point capability of FPGAs. Based on the proposed hybrid FPGA architecture,
we examine three aspects to optimise the speed and area for domain-specific applications.
First, we examine the interface between large coarse-grained embedded blocks (EBs) and fine-grained
elements in hybrid FPGAs. The interface includes parameters for varying: (1) aspect ratio of EBs,
(2) position of the EBs in the FPGA, (3) I/O pins arrangement of EBs, (4) interconnect flexibility of
EBs, and (5) location of additional embedded elements such as memory.
Second, we examine the interconnect structure for hybrid FPGAs. We investigate how large and highdensity
EBs affect the routing demand for hybrid FPGAs over a set of domain-specific applications.
We then propose three routing optimisation methods to meet the additional routing demand introduced
by large EBs: (1) identifying the best separation distance between EBs, (2) adding routing switches on
EBs to increase routing flexibility, and (3) introducing wider channel width near the edge of EBs. We
study and compare the trade-offs in delay, area and routability of these three optimisation methods.
Finally, we employ common subgraph extraction to determine the number of floating point adders/subtractors,
multipliers and wordblocks in the FPUs. The wordblocks include registers and can implement fixed
point operations. We study the area, speed and utilisation trade-offs of the selected FPU subgraphs
in a set of floating point benchmark circuits. We develop an optimised coarse-grained FPU, taking
into account both architectural and system-level issues. Furthermore, we investigate the trade-offs
between granularities and performance by composing small FPUs into a large FPU.
The results of this thesis would help design a domain-specific hybrid FPGA to meet user requirements,
by optimising for speed, area or a combination of speed and area
Interconnect yield analysis and fault tolerance for field programmable gate arrays
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