Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., California Univ., Los Angeles, CA, USA
Abstract :
As entire systems are being integrated on a single chip, the chip designers are in effect becoming the system designers. However, it is an open question whether the board-level system architecture design and optimization methodologies are also well-suited for such system-chips. Our experience with the networked wireless multimedia nodes and devices being designed under UCLA´s MERLIN project shows that the system-chip design problem is not just one of complexity and scalability arising from a large number of transistors. Instead, the primary problem and opportunity is in managing the diversity in a system, and exploiting it to optimize the system architecture. Indeed, the ability to do design tradeoffs and optimizations across diverse system layers and functions being integrated on a die is crucial. Facilitating such system level optimization ought to be the focus of design automation tools, and not the mere integration of cores encapsulating intellectual property. Supporting “tall and thin” chip designers is no longer adequate. The tools for system-chip design have to support “tall and fat” designers who, for example, need to optimize across the radio, protocol, DSP, and microcontroller functions in a wireless system-chip
Keywords :
VLSI; adaptive systems; circuit optimisation; digital radio; integrated circuit design; land mobile radio; multimedia communication; packet radio networks; protocols; MERLIN project; design tradeoffs; networked wireless information systems; networked wireless multimedia nodes; optimization; system architecture; system chip design; wireless system-chips; Design automation; Design methodology; Design optimization; Digital signal processing chips; Information systems; Intellectual property; Microcontrollers; Multimedia systems; Scalability; Wireless application protocol;