43 research outputs found

    Adaptive Latency Insensitive Protocols

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    Latency-insensitive design copes with excessive delays typical of global wires in current and future IC technologies. It achieves its goal via encapsulation of synchronous logic blocks in wrappers that communicate through a latency-insensitive protocol (LIP) and pipelined interconnects. Previously proposed solutions suffer from an excessive performance penalty in terms of throughput or from a lack of generality. This article presents an adaptive LIP that outperforms previous static implementations, as demonstrated by two relevant cases — a microprocessor and an MPEG encoder — whose components we made insensitive to the latencies of their interconnections through a newly developed wrapper. We also present an informal exposition of the theoretical basis of adaptive LIPs, as well as implementation detail

    A new system design methodology for wire pipelined SoC

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    Wire Pipelining (WP) has been proposed in order to limit the impact of increasing wire delays. In general, the added pipeline elements alters the system such that architectural changes are needed to preserve functionality. We illustrate a proposal that, while allowing the use of IP blocks without modification, takes advantage of a minimal knowledge of the IP's communication profile to dramatically increase the performances. We showed the formal equivalence between WP and original system and proved the higher performance achievable through a relevant case study

    Throughput-driven floorplanning with wire pipelining

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    The size of future high-performance SoC is such that the time-of-flight of wires connecting distant pins in the layout can be much higher than the clock period. In order to keep the frequency as high as possible, the wires may be pipelined. However, the insertion of flip-flops may alter the throughput of the system due to the presence of loops in the logic netlist. In this paper, we address the problem of floorplanning a large design where long interconnects are pipelined by inserting the throughput in the cost function of a tool based on simulated annealing. The results obtained on a series of benchmarks are then validated using a simple router that breaks long interconnects by suitably placing flip-flops along the wires

    Issues in Implementing Latency Insensitive Protocols

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    The performance of future Systems-on-Chip will be limited by the latency of long interconnects requiring more than one clock cycle for the signals to propagate. To deal with the problem L. Carloni et alii proposed the Latency Insensitive Protocols (LIP). A design that works under the assumption of zero-delay connections between functional modules is modified in a Latency Insensitive Design (LID) by encapsulating them within wrappers (“shells”) and connecting them through internally pipelined blocks (“relay stations”) complying with a protocol that guarantees identity of behavior [1]. The wrappers perform:- Data Validation: each output channel signals whether the datum therein present has still to be consumed.- Back Pressure: when the pearl is stopped the shell generates a stop signal sent in the opposite direction of inputs;- Clock Gating: a module waiting for new data and/or stopped keeps its present state. Such a protocol was implemented [2] through the introductio

    On-Chip Transparent Wire Pipelining (invited paper)

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    Wire pipelining has been proposed as a viable mean to break the discrepancy between decreasing gate delays and increasing wire delays in deep-submicron technologies. Far from being a straightforwardly applicable technique, this methodology requires a number of design modifications in order to insert it seamlessly in the current design flow. In this paper we briefly survey the methods presented by other researchers in the field and then we thoroughly analyze the solutions we recently proposed, ranging from system-level wire pipelining to physical design aspects

    Adaptive Latency Insensitive Protocols andElastic Circuits with Early Evaluation: A Comparative Analysis

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    AbstractLatency Insensitive Protocols (LIP) and Elastic Circuits (EC) solve the same problem of rendering a design tolerant to additional latencies caused by wires or computational elements. They are performance-limited by a firing semantics that enforces coherency through a lazy evaluation rule: Computation is enabled if all inputs to a block are simultaneously available. Adaptive LIP's (ALIP) and EC with early evaluation (ECEE) increase the performance by relaxing the evaluation rule: Computation is enabled as soon as the subset of inputs needed at a given time is available. Their difference in terms of implementation and behavior in selected cases justifies the need for the comparative analysis reported in this paper. Results have been obtained through simple examples, a single representative case-study already used in the context of both LIP's and EC and through extensive simulations over a suite of benchmarks

    A case study for NoC based homogeneous MPSoC architectures

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    The many-core design paradigm requires flexible and modular hardware and software components to provide the required scalability to next-generation on-chip multiprocessor architectures. A multidisciplinary approach is necessary to consider all the interactions between the different components of the design. In this paper, a complete design methodology that tackles at once the aspects of system level modeling, hardware architecture, and programming model has been successfully used for the implementation of a multiprocessor network-on-chip (NoC)-based system, the NoCRay graphic accelerator. The design, based on 16 processors, after prototyping with field-programmable gate array (FPGA), has been laid out in 90-nm technology. Post-layout results show very low power, area, as well as 500 MHz of clock frequency. Results show that an array of small and simple processors outperform a single high-end general purpose processo

    Understanding Factors Associated With Psychomotor Subtypes of Delirium in Older Inpatients With Dementia

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