• DocumentCode
    1119468
  • Title

    It\´s Time to Stop Calling Circuits "Hardware"

  • Author

    Vahid, Frank

  • Author_Institution
    Univ. of California, Riverside
  • Volume
    40
  • Issue
    9
  • fYear
    2007
  • Firstpage
    106
  • Lastpage
    108
  • Abstract
    Expanding the software concept, to spatial models like circuits facilitates programming next-generation embedded systems. Today, embedded-system designers frequently supplement microprocessors with custom digital circuits, often called coprocessors or accelerators, to meet performance demands. A circuit is simply a connection of components, perhaps low-level components like logic gates, or higher-level components like controllers, arithmetic logic units, encoding engines, or even processors. Increasingly, designers implement those circuits on an FPGA, a prefabricated chip that they can configure to implement a particular circuit merely by downloading a particular sequence of bits. Therefore, a circuit implemented on an FPGA is literally software. The key to an FPGA´s ability to implement a circuit as software is that an N-address-input memory can implement any N-input combinational circuit.
  • Keywords
    combinational circuits; embedded systems; field programmable gate arrays; FPGA; N-address-input memory; N-input combinational circuit; arithmetic logic units; controllers; coprocessor; custom digital circuits; encoding engines; field programmable gate arrays; logic gates; low-level components; next-generation embedded systems; Coprocessors; Digital circuits; Embedded software; Embedded system; Field programmable gate arrays; Hardware; Logic circuits; Logic gates; Logic programming; Microprocessors; FPGAs; embedded computing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Computer
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9162
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MC.2007.322
  • Filename
    4302628