DocumentCode
850760
Title
Cosimulation-based power estimation for system-on-chip design
Author
Lajolo, Marcello ; Raghunathan, Anand ; Dey, Sujit ; Lavagno, Luciano
Author_Institution
C&C Res. Labs., NEC, Princeton, NJ, USA
Volume
10
Issue
3
fYear
2002
fDate
6/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
253
Lastpage
266
Abstract
We present efficient power estimation techniques for hardware-software (HW-SW) system-on-chip (SoC) designs. Our techniques are based on concurrent and synchronized execution of multiple power estimators that analyze different parts of the SoC (we refer to this as coestimation), driven by a system-level simulation master. We motivate the need for power coestimation, and demonstrate that performing independent power estimation for the various system components can lead to significant errors in the power estimates, especially for control-intensive and reactive-embedded systems. We observe that the computation time for performing power coestimation is dominated by: i) the requirement to analyze/simulate some parts of the system at lower levels of abstraction in order to obtain accurate estimates of timing and switching activity information and ii) the need to communicate between and synchronize the various simulators. Thus, a naive implementation of power coestimation may be too inefficient to be used in an iterative design exploration framework. To address this issue, we present several acceleration (speed-up) techniques for power coestimation. The acceleration techniques are energy caching, software power macro-modeling, and statistical sampling. Our speed-up techniques reduce the workload of the power estimators for the individual SoC components, as well as their communication/synchronization overhead. Experimental results indicate that the use of the proposed acceleration techniques results in significant (8/spl times/ to 87/spl times/) speed-ups in SOC power estimation time, with minimal impact on accuracy. We also show the utility of our coestimation tool to explore system-level power tradeoffs for a TCP/IP check-sum engine subsystem.
Keywords
VLSI; embedded systems; hardware-software codesign; low-power electronics; system-on-chip; acceleration techniques; concurrent execution; cosimulation-based power estimation; embedded processor; energy caching; hardware-software designs; iterative design exploration framework; low-power design; multiple power estimators; run-time flow; software power macro-modeling; statistical sampling; synchronized execution; system-level simulation master; system-on-chip design; Acceleration; Analytical models; Computational modeling; Control systems; Error correction; Independent component analysis; Information analysis; Performance analysis; System-on-a-chip; Timing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1063-8210
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TVLSI.2002.1043328
Filename
1043328
Link To Document