413 research outputs found

    Degradation in FPGAs: Monitoring, Modeling and Mitigation

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    This dissertation targets the transistor aging degradation as well as the associated thermal challenges in FPGAs (since there is an exponential relation between aging and chip temperature). The main objectives are to perform experimentation, analysis and device-level model abstraction for modeling the degradation in FPGAs, then to monitor the FPGA to keep track of aging rates and ultimately to propose an aging-aware FPGA design flow to mitigate the aging

    Programmable photonics : an opportunity for an accessible large-volume PIC ecosystem

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    We look at the opportunities presented by the new concepts of generic programmable photonic integrated circuits (PIC) to deploy photonics on a larger scale. Programmable PICs consist of waveguide meshes of tunable couplers and phase shifters that can be reconfigured in software to define diverse functions and arbitrary connectivity between the input and output ports. Off-the-shelf programmable PICs can dramatically shorten the development time and deployment costs of new photonic products, as they bypass the design-fabrication cycle of a custom PIC. These chips, which actually consist of an entire technology stack of photonics, electronics packaging and software, can potentially be manufactured cheaper and in larger volumes than application-specific PICs. We look into the technology requirements of these generic programmable PICs and discuss the economy of scale. Finally, we make a qualitative analysis of the possible application spaces where generic programmable PICs can play an enabling role, especially to companies who do not have an in-depth background in PIC technology

    Delay Measurements and Self Characterisation on FPGAs

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    This thesis examines new timing measurement methods for self delay characterisation of Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) components and delay measurement of complex circuits on FPGAs. Two novel measurement techniques based on analysis of a circuit's output failure rate and transition probability is proposed for accurate, precise and efficient measurement of propagation delays. The transition probability based method is especially attractive, since it requires no modifications in the circuit-under-test and requires little hardware resources, making it an ideal method for physical delay analysis of FPGA circuits. The relentless advancements in process technology has led to smaller and denser transistors in integrated circuits. While FPGA users benefit from this in terms of increased hardware resources for more complex designs, the actual productivity with FPGA in terms of timing performance (operating frequency, latency and throughput) has lagged behind the potential improvements from the improved technology due to delay variability in FPGA components and the inaccuracy of timing models used in FPGA timing analysis. The ability to measure delay of any arbitrary circuit on FPGA offers many opportunities for on-chip characterisation and physical timing analysis, allowing delay variability to be accurately tracked and variation-aware optimisations to be developed, reducing the productivity gap observed in today's FPGA designs. The measurement techniques are developed into complete self measurement and characterisation platforms in this thesis, demonstrating their practical uses in actual FPGA hardware for cross-chip delay characterisation and accurate delay measurement of both complex combinatorial and sequential circuits, further reinforcing their positions in solving the delay variability problem in FPGAs

    GROK-FPGA: Generating Real on-Chip Knowledge for FPGA Fine-Grain Delays Using Timing Extraction

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    Circuit variation is one of the biggest problems to overcome if Moore\u27s Law is to continue. It is no longer possible to maintain an abstraction of identical devices without huge yield losses, performance penalties, and energy costs. Current techniques such as margining and grade binning are used to deal with this problem. However, they tend to be conservative, offering limited solutions that will not scale as variation increases. Conventional circuits use limited tests and statistical models to determine the margining and binning required to counteract variation. If the limited tests fail, the whole chip is discarded. On the other hand, reconfigurable circuits, such as FPGAs, can use more fine-grained, aggressive techniques that carefully choose which resources to use in order to mitigate variation. Knowing which resources to use and avoid, however, requires measurement of underlying variation. We present Timing Extraction, a methodology that allows measurement of process variation without expensive testers nor highly invasive techniques, rather, relying only on resources already available on conventional FPGAs. It takes advantage of the fact that we can measure the delay of logic paths between any two registers. Measuring enough paths, provides the information necessary to decompose the delay of each path into individual components-essentially, forming a system of linear equations. Determining which paths to measure requires simple graph transformation algorithms applied to a representation of the FPGA circuit. Ultimately, this process decomposes the FPGA into individual components and identifies which paths to measure for computing the delay of individual components. We apply Timing Extraction to 18 commercially available Altera Cyclone III (65 nm) FPGAs. We measure 22×28 logic clusters and the interconnect within and between cluster. Timing Extraction decomposes this region into 1,356,182 components, classified into 10 categories, requiring 2,736,556 path measurements. With an accuracy of ±3.2 ps, our measurements reveal regional variation on the order of 50 ps, systematic variation from 30 ps to 70 ps, and random variation in the clusters with σ=15 ps and in the interconnect with σ=62 ps
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