Title :
Design-for-adaptivity of microarchitectures
Author :
Rykunov, Maxim ; Mokhov, Andrey ; Sokolov, Danil ; Yakovlev, Alex ; Koelmans, A.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Newcastle Univ., Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
Abstract :
In the last decade we have witnessed a steady trend towards functional diversification of hardware, because an application specific hardware component is a lot easier to design and optimise than a general-purpose one. Therefore, a modern microelectronics system often contains several application specific cores, each targeted for a particular function. As operating conditions issues are becoming more important, we start to see non-functional diversification in terms of performance and energy consumption; it is expected that a system can operate in a wide spectrum of environmental conditions and it should support a hierarchy of energy-saving modes. As a result, "mode-specific" processing cores are gaining popularity. The number of possible combinations of functional and nonfunctional variations of hardware components is becoming unmanageable and is leading to inefficient silicon utilisation. In this paper we explore a novel approach to hardware design which allows building computation systems capable of adjusting to operating conditions through dynamic reconfiguration. We demonstrate the approach by designing an asynchronous microprocessor core that can operate in a wide range of supply voltages and can adjust its functionality towards a specific application and operating mode. Our methodology is based on a novel model of hardware description and on self-timed design techniques.
Keywords :
energy consumption; integrated circuit design; microprocessor chips; multiprocessing systems; application specific hardware component; asynchronous microprocessor core; computation system; design-for-adaptivity; dynamic reconfiguration; energy consumption; energy-saving mode; environmental condition; functional variation; hardware description; hardware design; hardware functional diversification; microarchitecture; microelectronics system; mode-specific processing core; nonfunctional diversification; self-timed design technique; supply voltage; Delay lines; Hardware; Microprocessors; Multicore processing; Random access memory; Registers; Asynchronous Circuits; Dynamic reconfiguration; Microprocessor; Synthesis of Microprocessor;
Conference_Titel :
Application-Specific Systems, Architectures and Processors (ASAP), 2013 IEEE 24th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Washington, DC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0494-5
DOI :
10.1109/ASAP.2013.6567596