2,209 research outputs found

    Worst-case end-to-end delays evaluation for SpaceWire networks

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    SpaceWire is a standard for on-board satellite networks chosen by the ESA as the basis for multiplexing payload and control traffic on future data-handling architectures. However, network designers need tools to ensure that the network is able to deliver critical messages on time. Current research fails to address this needs for SpaceWire networks. On one hand, many papers only seek to determine probabilistic results for end-to-end delays on Wormhole networks like SpaceWire. This does not provide sufficient guarantee for critical traffic. On the other hand, a few papers give methods to determine maximum latencies on wormhole networks that, unlike SpaceWire, have dedicated real-time mechanisms built-in. Thus, in this paper, we propose an appropriate method to compute an upper-bound on the worst-case end-to-end delay of a packet in a SpaceWire network

    pTNoC: Probabilistically time-analyzable tree-based NoC for mixed-criticality systems

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    The use of networks-on-chip (NoC) in real-time safety-critical multicore systems challenges deriving tight worst-case execution time (WCET) estimates. This is due to the complexities in tightly upper-bounding the contention in the access to the NoC among running tasks. Probabilistic Timing Analysis (PTA) is a powerful approach to derive WCET estimates on relatively complex processors. However, so far it has only been tested on small multicores comprising an on-chip bus as communication means, which intrinsically does not scale to high core counts. In this paper we propose pTNoC, a new tree-based NoC design compatible with PTA requirements and delivering scalability towards medium/large core counts. pTNoC provides tight WCET estimates by means of asymmetric bandwidth guarantees for mixed-criticality systems with negligible impact on average performance. Finally, our implementation results show the reduced area and power costs of the pTNoC.The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme [FP7/2007-2013] under the PROXIMA Project (www.proxima-project.eu), grant agreement no 611085. This work has also been partially supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation under grant TIN2015-65316-P and the HiPEAC Network of Excellence. Mladen Slijepcevic is funded by the Obra Social Fundación la Caixa under grant Doctorado “la Caixa” - Severo Ochoa. Carles Hern´andez is jointly funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) and FEDER funds through grant TIN2014-60404-JIN. Jaume Abella has been partially supported by the MINECO under Ramon y Cajal postdoctoral fellowship number RYC-2013-14717.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Improving performance guarantees in wormhole mesh NoC designs

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    Wormhole-based mesh Networks-on-Chip (wNoC) are deployed in high-performance many-core processors due to their physical scalability and low-cost. Delivering tight and time composable Worst-Case Execution Time (WCET) estimates for applications as needed in safety-critical real-time embedded systems is challenged by wNoCs due to their distributed nature. We propose a bandwidth control mechanism for wNoCs that enables the computation of tight time-composable WCET estimates with low average performance degradation and high scalability. Our evaluation with the EEMBC automotive suite and an industrial real-time parallel avionics application confirms so.The research leading to these results is funded by the European Union Seventh Framework Programme under grant agreement no. 287519 (parMERASA) and by the Ministry of Science and Technology of Spain under contract TIN2012-34557. Milos Panic is funded by the Spanish Ministry of Education under the FPU grant FPU12/05966. Carles Hernández is jointly funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and FEDER funds through grant TIN2014-60404-JIN. Jaume Abella is partially supported by the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness under Ramon y Cajal postdoctoral fellowship number RYC-2013-14717.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Buffer-aware bounds to multi-point progressive blocking in priority-preemptive NoCs

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    This paper aims to reduce the pessimism of the analysis of the multi-point progressive blocking (MPB) problem in real-time priority-preemptive wormhole networks-on-chip. It shows that the amount of buffering on each network node can influence the worst-case interference that packets can suffer along their routes, and it proposes a novel analytical model that can quantify such interference as a function of the buffer size. It shows that, perhaps counter-intuitively, smaller buffers can result in lower upper-bounds on interference and thus improved schedulability. Didactic examples and large-scale experiments provide evidence of the strength of the proposed approach

    Least Upper Delay Bound for VBR Flows in Networks-on- Chip with Virtual Channels

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    Real-time applications such as multimedia and gaming require stringent performance guarantees, usually enforced by a tight upper bound on the maximum end-to-end delay. For FIFO multiplexed on-chip packet switched networks we consider worst-case delay bounds for Variable Bit-Rate (VBR) flows with aggregate scheduling, which schedules multiple flows as an aggregate flow. VBR Flows are characterized by a maximum transfer size, peak rate, burstiness, and average sustainable rate. Based on network calculus, we present and prove theorems to derive per-flow end-to-end Equivalent Service Curves (ESC) which are in turn used for computing Least Upper Delay Bounds (LUDBs) of individual flows. In a realistic case study we find that the end-to-end delay bound is up to 46.9% more accurate than the case without considering the traffic peak behavior. Likewise, results also show similar improvements for synthetic traffic patterns. The proposed methodology is implemented in C++ and has low run-time complexity, enabling quick evaluation for large and complex SoCs

    Worst-Case Communication Time Analysis for On-Chip Networks with Finite Buffers

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    Network-on-Chip (NoC) is the ideal interconnection architecture for many-core systems due to its superior scalability and performance. An NoC must deliver critical messages from a realtime application within specific deadlines. A violation of this requirement may compromise the entire system operation. Therefore, a series of experiments considering worst-case scenarios must be conducted to verify if deadlines can be satisfied. However, simulation-based experiments are time-consuming, and one alternative is schedulability analysis. In this context, this work proposes a schedulability analysis to accelerate design space exploration in real-time applications on NoC-based systems. The proposed worstcase analysis estimates the maximum latency of traffic flows assuming direct and indirect blocking. Besides, we consider the size of buffers to reduce the analysis’ pessimism. We also present an extension of the analysis, including self-blocking. We conduct a series of experiments to evaluate the proposed analysis using a cycle-accurate simulator. The experimental results show that the proposed solution presents tighter results and runs four orders of magnitude faster than the simulation.N/

    Buffer-Aware Worst-Case Timing Analysis of Wormhole NoCs Using Network Calculus

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    Abstract—Conducting worst-case timing analyses for wormhole Networks-on-chip (NoCs) is a fundamental aspect to guarantee real-time requirements, but it is known to be a challenging issue due to complex congestion patterns that can occur. In that respect, we introduce in this paper a new buffer-aware timing analysis of wormhole NoCs based on Network Calculus. Our main idea consists in considering the flows serialization phenomena along the path of a flow of interest (f.o.i), by paying the bursts of interfering flows only at the first convergence point, and refining the interference patterns for the f.o.i accounting for the limited buffer size. Moreover, we aim to handle such an issue for wormhole NoCs, implementing a fixed priority-preemptive arbitration of Virtual Channels (VCs), that can be assigned to an arbitrary number of traffic classes with different priority levels, i.e. VC sharing, and each traffic class may contain an arbitrary number of flows, i.e. priority sharing. It is worth noting that such characteristics cover a large panel of wormhole NoCs. The derived delay bounds are analyzed and compared to available results of existing approaches, based on Scheduling Theory as well as Compositional Performance Analysis (CPA). In doing this, we highlight a noticeable enhancement of the delay bounds tightness in comparison to CPA approach, and the inherent safe bounds of our proposal in comparison to Scheduling Theory approaches. Finally, we perform experiments on a manycore platform, to confront our timing analysis predictions to experimental data and assess its tightness

    Slot-Based Transmission Protocol for Real-Time NoCs - SBT-NoC

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    Network on Chip (NoC) interconnects are some of the most challenging-to-analyse components of multiprocessor platforms. This is primarily due to the following two reasons: (i) NoCs contain numerous shared resources (e.g. routers, links), and (ii) the network traffic often concurrently traverses multiple of those resources. Consequently, complex contention scenarios among traffic flows might occur, some of the important implications being significant performance limitations, and difficulties when performing the real-time analysis. In this work, we propose a slot-based transmission protocol for NoCs (called SBT-NoC), and an accompanying analysis method for deriving worst-case traffic latencies. The cornerstone of SBT-NoC is a contention-less slot-based transmission, arbitrated via a protocol running on a dedicated network medium. The main advantage of SBT-NoC is that, while not requiring any sophisticated hardware support (e.g. virtual channels, a flit-level arbitration), it makes NoCs amenable to real-time analysis and guarantees bounded low latencies of high-priority time-critical flows, which is a sine qua non for the inclusion of NoCs, and multiprocessors in general, in the real-time domain. The experimental evaluation, including both synthetic workloads and a use-case of an autonomous driving vehicle application, reveals that SBT-NoC offers a plethora of configuration opportunities, which makes it applicable to a wide range of diverse traffic workloads

    Real-Time Analysis of Priority-Preemptive NoCs with Arbitrary Buffer Sizes and Router Delays

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    Nowadays available multiprocessor platforms predominantly use a network-on-chip (NoC) architecture as an interconnect medium, due to its good scalability and performance. During the last decade, NoCs received a significant amount of attention from the real-time community. One promising category of approaches suggests to employ already existing hardware features called virtual channels, and dedicate them, exclusively, to individual communication traffic flows. In this way, NoCs become more amenable to the real-time analysis, which is an essential requirement for providing both safe and tight worst-case analysis methods, and consequently deriving real-time guarantees. In this manuscript, we present the approach which falls in the aforementioned category. Specifically, we propose a novel method for the worst-case analysis of the NoC traffic, assuming the existence of per-flow dedicated virtual channels. Compared to the state-of-the-art techniques, our approach yields substantially tighter upper-bounds on the worst-case traversal times (WCTTs) of communication traffic flows. By employing the proposed method, resource over-provisioning can be mitigated to a large extent, and significant design-cost reductions can be achieved. Moreover, we implemented a cycle-accurate simulator of the assumed NoC architecture, and used it to assess the tightness of derived WCTT bounds. Finally, we reached an interesting conclusion that bigger virtual channel buffers do not necessarily lead to better results, and in many cases can be counter-productive, which is a very important finding for system designers
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