DocumentCode :
3028252
Title :
Novel Design Methods and a Tool Flow for Unleashing Dynamic Reconfiguration
Author :
Papadimitriou, Kyprianos ; Pilato, Christian ; Pnevmatikatos, Dionisios ; Santambrogio, Marco D. ; Ciobanu, Catalin ; Todman, Tim ; Becker, T. ; Davidson, Timothy N. ; Niu, Xin-liang ; Gaydadjiev, Georgi ; Luk, Wayne ; Stroobandt, Dirk
fYear :
2012
fDate :
5-7 Dec. 2012
Firstpage :
391
Lastpage :
398
Abstract :
During the last few years, there is an increasing interest in mixing software and hardware to serve efficiently different applications. This is due to the heterogeneity characterizing the tasks of an application which require the presence of resources from both worlds, software and hardware. Controlling effectively these resources through an integrated tool flow is a challenging problem and towards this direction only a few efforts exist. In fact, a framework that seamlessly exploits both resources of a platform for executing efficiently an application has not yet come into existence. Moreover, reconfigurable computing often incorporated in such platforms due to its high flexibility and customization, has not yet taken off due to the lack of exploiting its full capabilities. Thus, the capability of reconfigurable devices such as Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) to be dynamically reconfigured, i.e. reprogramming part of the chip while other parts of the same chip remain functional, has not yet taken off even in small-scale basis. The inherent difficulty in using the tools to control this technology has kept it back from being adopted by academia and industry alike. The FASTER (Facilitating Analysis and Synthesis Technologies for Effective Reconfiguration) project aims at introducing a design methodology and a tool flow that will enable designers to implement effectively and easily a system specification on a platform combining software and reconfigurable resources. The FASTER framework accepts as input a high-level description of the application and the architectural details of the target platform, and through certain steps it can enable the full use of the capabilities of the platform, while at the same time it should be flexible enough so as to balance efficiently performance, power and area. One of the main novelties is the incorporation of partial reconfiguration as an explicit design concept at an early stage of the design flow. We target different applic- tions from the embedded, desktop and high-performance computing domains. In all cases we will demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed framework in exploiting the inherent parallelism of applications and enabling the runtime adaptation of the platforms to the changing needs of the applications.
Keywords :
field programmable gate arrays; formal specification; high level synthesis; parallel processing; reconfigurable architectures; FASTER project; FPGA; Facilitating Analysis and Synthesis Technologies for Effective Reconfiguration; application parallelism; architectural detail; design concept; design flow; design method; desktop computing; dynamic reconfiguration; embedded computing; field programmable gate array; high-level description; high-performance computing; integrated tool flow; partial reconfiguration; platform runtime adaptation; reconfigurable computing; reconfigurable device; reconfigurable resource; resource control; resource exploitation; system specification; Computer architecture; Design methodology; Educational institutions; Field programmable gate arrays; Hardware; Runtime; Software; Dynamic reconfiguation; micro-reconfiguration; runtime system; tool flow; verification;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Computational Science and Engineering (CSE), 2012 IEEE 15th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Nicosia
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-5165-2
Electronic_ISBN :
978-0-7695-4914-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICCSE.2012.61
Filename :
6417320
Link To Document :
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