DocumentCode
3561993
Title
Detailed placement with net length constraints
Author
Halpin, Bill ; Sehgal, Naresh ; Chen, C. Y Roger
Author_Institution
Intel Corp., Syracuse Univ., Santa Clara, CA, USA
fYear
2003
Firstpage
22
Lastpage
27
Abstract
Increasing demands created by Systems-On-Chip (SOC) and process advances have increased the difficulty of timing driven placement. The primary issue in SOC is timing closure. This requires us to look at timing at all design levels, especially placement. Recently, several promising approaches for timing-driven placement have been presented using net length constraints for timing optimization (Alpert et al., 2001). A Net Length Constraint (NLC) is an upper limit on a net´s length. These net-constrained global placement techniques give excellent timing results by meeting NLCs on timing-critical nets. These works focused only on global NLC placement. Detailed placement and legalization are important steps in the placement flow. Current algorithms, which are not NLC aware, give back the gains from global NLC placement. The contributions of this paper are a new NLC global placement rebalancing method and two detailed placement algorithms that work in conjunction with the recursive bisection net-constrained global placer (Alpert et al., 2001). The first detailed placer uses grid-based placement and transportation solving to assign instances to the grid. The second detailed placer uses simulated annealing to optimize placement for NLC. On benchmark circuits from MCNC and Intel Corporation, the grid and simulated annealing placers are able to achieve placements which exceed constraints by, on average only, 2.7% and 1.9%, respectively.
Keywords
VLSI; circuit layout CAD; integrated circuit layout; system-on-chip; timing; Intel corporation; MCNC; SOC; benchmark circuit; current algorithm; global NLC placement; grid placer; grid-based placement; net length constraint; net-constrained global placer; placement flow; rebalancing method; recursive bisection global placer; simulated annealing placer; systems-on-chip; timing closure; timing driven placement; timing-critical net; Automatic control; Circuit simulation; Constraint optimization; Delay; Design engineering; Optimization methods; Simulated annealing; Timing; Transportation; Very large scale integration;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
System-on-Chip for Real-Time Applications, 2003. Proceedings. The 3rd IEEE International Workshop on
Print_ISBN
0-7695-1944-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IWSOC.2003.1212999
Filename
1212999
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