• DocumentCode
    818671
  • Title

    Techniques for Fast Physical Synthesis

  • Author

    Alpert, Charles J. ; Karandikar, Shrirang K. ; Li, Zhuo ; Nam, Gi-Joon ; Quay, Stephen T. ; Ren, Haoxing ; Sze, C.N. ; Villarrubia, Paul G. ; Yildiz, Mehmet C.

  • Author_Institution
    IBM Austin Res. Lab., TX
  • Volume
    95
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2007
  • fDate
    3/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    573
  • Lastpage
    599
  • Abstract
    The traditional purpose of physical synthesis is to perform timing closure , i.e., to create a placed design that meets its timing specifications while also satisfying electrical, routability, and signal integrity constraints. In modern design flows, physical synthesis tools hardly ever achieve this goal in their first iteration. The design team must iterate by studying the output of the physical synthesis run, then potentially massage the input, e.g., by changing the floorplan, timing assertions, pin locations, logic structures, etc., in order to hopefully achieve a better solution for the next iteration. The complexity of physical synthesis means that systems can take days to run on designs with multimillions of placeable objects, which severely hurts design productivity. This paper discusses some newer techniques that have been deployed within IBM´s physical synthesis tool called PDS that significantly improves throughput. In particular, we focus on some of the biggest contributors to runtime, placement, legalization, buffering, and electric correction, and present techniques that generate significant turnaround time improvements
  • Keywords
    high level synthesis; logic design; timing; CMOS integrated circuits; IBM physical synthesis tool; PDS; circuit optimization; circuit synthesis; design automation; design productivity; electrical constraints; improved throughput; placed design; routability constraint; signal integrity constraints; timing closure; timing specifications; turnaround time improvements; Delay; Hardware; Integrated circuit synthesis; Logic design; Productivity; Runtime; Signal design; Signal synthesis; Timing; Wire; CMOS integrated circuits; Circuit optimization; circuit synthesis; design automation;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Proceedings of the IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9219
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JPROC.2006.890096
  • Filename
    4167765