DocumentCode :
2275188
Title :
PathFinder: A Negotiation-Based Performance-Driven Router for FPGAs
Author :
Mcmurchie, Larry ; Ebeling, Carl
Author_Institution :
University of Washington, Seattle, WA
fYear :
1995
fDate :
1995
Firstpage :
111
Lastpage :
117
Abstract :
Routing FPGAs is a challenging problem because of the relative scarcity of routing resources, both wires and connection points. This can lead either to slow implementations caused by long wiring paths that avoid congestion or a failure to route all signals. This paper presents PathFinder, a router that balances the goals of performance and routability. PathFinder uses an iterative algorithm that converges to a solution in which all signals are routed while achieving close to the optimal performance allowed by the placement. Routability is achieved by forcing signals to negotiate for a resource and thereby determine which signal needs the resource most. Delay is minimized by allowing the more critical signals a greater say in this negotiation. Because PathFinder requires only a directed graph to describe the architecture of routing resources, it adapts readily to a wide variety of FPGA architectures such as Triptych, Xilinx 3000 and mesh-connected arrays of FPGAs. The results of routing ISCAS benchmarks on the Triptych FPGA architecture show an average increase of only 4.5% in critical path delay over the optimum delay for a placement. Routes of ISCAS benchmarks on the Xilinx 3000 architecture show a greater completion rate than commercial tools, as well as 11% faster implementations.
Keywords :
Adaptive arrays; Application specific integrated circuits; Computer science; Delay; Field programmable gate arrays; Iterative algorithms; Resource management; Routing; Wires; Wiring;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Field-Programmable Gate Arrays, 1995. FPGA '95. Proceedings of the Third International ACM Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2550-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/FPGA.1995.242049
Filename :
1377269
Link To Document :
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