DocumentCode
3030791
Title
Reconfigurable computing: what, why, and implications for design automation
Author
DeHon, André ; Wawrzynek, John
Author_Institution
Comput. Sci. Div., California Univ., Berkeley, CA, USA
fYear
1999
fDate
1999
Firstpage
610
Lastpage
615
Abstract
Reconfigurable computing is emerging as an important new organizational structure for implementing computations. It combines the post-fabrication programmability of processors with the spatial computational style most commonly employed in hardware designs. The result changes traditional “hardware” and “software” boundaries, providing an opportunity for greater computational capacity and density within a programmable media. Reconfigurable computing must leverage traditional CAD technology for building spatial designs. Beyond that, however, reprogrammability introduces new challenges and opportunities for automation, including binding-time and specialization optimizations, regularity extraction and exploitation, and temporal partitioning and scheduling
Keywords
electronic design automation; reconfigurable architectures; CAD technology; binding-time; design automation; post-fabrication programmability; reconfigurable computing architectures; regularity extraction; reprogrammability; scheduling; spatial computational style; specialization optimizations; temporal partitioning; Buildings; Computer science; Design automation; Engines; Field programmable gate arrays; Hardware; Permission; Scheduling; Silicon; Software systems;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Design Automation Conference, 1999. Proceedings. 36th
Conference_Location
New Orleans, LA
Print_ISBN
1-58113-092-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DAC.1999.782016
Filename
782016
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