• DocumentCode
    454437
  • Title

    Efficient Timing-Driven Incremental Routing for VLSI Circuits Using DFS and Localized Slack-Satisfaction Computations

  • Author

    Dutt, Shantanu ; Arslan, Hasan

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Illinois Univ., Chicago, IL
  • Volume
    1
  • fYear
    2006
  • fDate
    6-10 March 2006
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    6
  • Abstract
    In current very deep submicron (VDSM) circuits, incremental routing is crucial to incorporating engineering change orders (ECOs) late in the design cycle. In this paper, we address the important incremental routing objective of satisfying timing constraints in high-speed designs while minimizing wirelength, vias and routing layers. We develop an effective timing-driven (TD) incremental routing algorithm TIDE for ASIC circuits that addresses the dual goals of time-efficiency, and slack satisfaction coupled with effective optimizations. There are three main novelties in our approach: (i) a technique for locally determining slack satisfaction of the entire routing tree when either a new pin is added to the tree or an interconnect in it is re-routed - this technique is used in both the global and detailed routing phases; (ii) an interval-intersection and tree-truncation algorithm, used in global routing, for quickly determining a near-minimum-length slack-satisfying interconnection of a pin to a partial routing tree; (iii) a depth-first-search process, used in detailed routing, that allows new nets to bump and re-route existing nets in a controlled manner in order to obtain better optimized designs. Experimental results show that within the constraint of routing all nets in only two metal layers, TIDE succeeds in routing more than 94% of ECO-generated nets, and also that its failure rate is 7 and 6.7 times less than that of the TD versions of previous incremental routers Standard (Std) and Ripup & Reroute (R & R), respectively. It is also able to route nets with very little (3.4%) slack violations, while the other two methods have appreciable slack violations (16-19%). TIDE is about 2 times slower than the simple TD-Std method, but more than 3 times faster than TD-R&R
  • Keywords
    VLSI; integrated circuit design; integrated circuit interconnections; network routing; search problems; trees (mathematics); ASIC circuits; TIDE; VLSI circuits; depth-first-search process; global routing; high-speed designs; interval-intersection algorithm; localized slack-satisfaction computations; routing layers; routing phases; routing tree; timing-driven incremental routing; tree-truncation algorithm; very deep submicron circuits; wirelength minimization; Algorithm design and analysis; Application specific integrated circuits; Coupling circuits; Design engineering; Design optimization; Integrated circuit interconnections; Routing; Tides; Timing; Very large scale integration;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Design, Automation and Test in Europe, 2006. DATE '06. Proceedings
  • Conference_Location
    Munich
  • Print_ISBN
    3-9810801-1-4
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/DATE.2006.244117
  • Filename
    1656993