294 research outputs found
Generic Pipelined Processor Modeling and High Performance Cycle-Accurate Simulator Generation
Detailed modeling of processors and high performance cycle-accurate
simulators are essential for today's hardware and software design. These
problems are challenging enough by themselves and have seen many previous
research efforts. Addressing both simultaneously is even more challenging, with
many existing approaches focusing on one over another. In this paper, we
propose the Reduced Colored Petri Net (RCPN) model that has two advantages:
first, it offers a very simple and intuitive way of modeling pipelined
processors; second, it can generate high performance cycle-accurate simulators.
RCPN benefits from all the useful features of Colored Petri Nets without
suffering from their exponential growth in complexity. RCPN processor models
are very intuitive since they are a mirror image of the processor pipeline
block diagram. Furthermore, in our experiments on the generated cycle-accurate
simulators for XScale and StrongArm processor models, we achieved an order of
magnitude (~15 times) speedup over the popular SimpleScalar ARM simulator.Comment: Submitted on behalf of EDAA (http://www.edaa.com/
Programming MPSoC platforms: Road works ahead
This paper summarizes a special session on multicore/multi-processor system-on-chip (MPSoC) programming challenges. The current trend towards MPSoC platforms in most computing domains does not only mean a radical change in computer architecture. Even more important from a SW developerÂŽs viewpoint, at the same time the classical sequential von Neumann programming model needs to be overcome. Efficient utilization of the MPSoC HW resources demands for radically new models and corresponding SW development tools, capable of exploiting the available parallelism and guaranteeing bug-free parallel SW. While several standards are established in the high-performance computing domain (e.g. OpenMP), it is clear that more innovations are required for successful\ud
deployment of heterogeneous embedded MPSoC. On the other hand, at least for coming years, the freedom for disruptive programming technologies is limited by the huge amount of certified sequential code that demands for a more pragmatic, gradual tool and code replacement strategy
Designing a CPU model: from a pseudo-formal document to fast code
For validating low level embedded software, engineers use simulators that
take the real binary as input. Like the real hardware, these full-system
simulators are organized as a set of components. The main component is the CPU
simulator (ISS), because it is the usual bottleneck for the simulation speed,
and its development is a long and repetitive task. Previous work showed that an
ISS can be generated from an Architecture Description Language (ADL). In the
work reported in this paper, we generate a CPU simulator directly from the
pseudo-formal descriptions of the reference manual. For each instruction, we
extract the information describing its behavior, its binary encoding, and its
assembly syntax. Next, after automatically applying many optimizations on the
extracted information, we generate a SystemC/TLM ISS. We also generate tests
for the decoder and a formal specification in Coq. Experiments show that the
generated ISS is as fast and stable as our previous hand-written ISS.Comment: 3rd Workshop on: Rapid Simulation and Performance Evaluation: Methods
and Tools (2011
Hardware/Software Codesign
The current state of the art technology in integrated circuits allows the incorporation of multiple processor cores and memory arrays, in addition to application specific hardware, on a single substrate. As silicon technology has become more advanced, allowing the implementation of more complex designs, systems have begun to incorporate considerable amounts of embedded software [3]. Thus it becomes increasingly necessary for the system designers to have knowledge on both hardware and software to make efficient design tradeoffs. This is where hardware/software codesign comes into existence
Custom Integrated Circuits
Contains table of contents for Part III, table of contents for Section 1 and reports on eleven research projects.IBM CorporationMIT School of EngineeringNational Science Foundation Grant MIP 94-23221Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency/U.S. Army Intelligence Center Contract DABT63-94-C-0053Mitsubishi CorporationNational Science Foundation Young Investigator Award Fellowship MIP 92-58376Joint Industry Program on Offshore Structure AnalysisAnalog DevicesDefense Advanced Research Projects AgencyCadence Design SystemsMAFET ConsortiumConsortium for Superconducting ElectronicsNational Defense Science and Engineering Graduate FellowshipDigital Equipment CorporationMIT Lincoln LaboratorySemiconductor Research CorporationMultiuniversity Research IntiativeNational Science Foundatio
Using Rapid Prototyping in Computer Architecture Design Laboratories
This paper describes the undergraduate computer architecture courses and laboratories introduced at Georgia Tech during the past two years. A core sequence of six required courses for computer engineering students has been developed. In this paper, emphasis is placed upon the new core laboratories which utilize commercial CAD tools, FPGAs, hardware emulators, and a VHDL based rapid prototyping approach to simulate, synthesize, and implement prototype computer hardware
Fast approximately timed simulation
International audienceIn this paper we present a technique for fast approximately timed simulation of software within a virtual prototyping framework. Our method performs a static analysis of the program control flow graph to construct annotations of the simulated program, combined with dynamic performance information. The static analysis estimates execution time based on a target architecture model. The delays introduced by instruction fetch and data cache misses are evaluated dynamically. At the end of each block, static and dynamic information are combined with branch target prediction to compute the total execution time of the blocks. As a result, we can provide approximate performance estimates with a high simulation speed that is still usable for software developers
Efficient Simulation of Structural Faults for the Reliability Evaluation at System-Level
In recent technology nodes, reliability is considered a part of the standard design Âżow at all levels of embedded system design. While techniques that use only low-level models at gate- and register transfer-level offer high accuracy, they are too inefficient to consider the overall application of the embedded system. Multi-level models with high abstraction are essential to efficiently evaluate the impact of physical defects on the system. This paper provides a methodology that leverages state-of-the-art techniques for efficient fault simulation of structural faults together with transaction-level modeling. This way it is possible to accurately evaluate the impact of the faults on the entire hardware/software system. A case study of a system consisting of hardware and software for image compression and data encryption is presented and the method is compared to a standard gate/RT mixed-level approac
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