• DocumentCode
    24583
  • Title

    Self-Repairing Digital System With Unified Recovery Process Inspired by Endocrine Cellular Communication

  • Author

    Yang, I. ; Sung Hoon Jung ; Kwang-hyun Cho

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Bio & Brain Eng., Korea Adv. Inst. of Sci. & Technol., Daejeon, South Korea
  • Volume
    21
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    Jun-13
  • Firstpage
    1027
  • Lastpage
    1040
  • Abstract
    Self-repairing digital systems have recently emerged as the most promising alternative for fault-tolerant systems. However, such systems are still impractical in many cases, particularly due to the complex rerouting process that follows cell replacement. They lose efficiency when the circuit size increases, due to the extra hardware in addition to the functional circuit and the unutilization of normal operating hardware for fault recovery. In this paper, we propose a system inspired by endocrine cellular communication, which simplifies the rerouting process in two ways: 1) by lowering the hardware overhead along with the increasing size of the circuit and 2) by reducing the hardware unutilized for fault recovery while maintaining good fault-coverage. The proposed system is composed of a structural layer and a gene-control layer. The structural layer consists of novel modules and their interconnections. In each module of our system, the encoded data, called the genome, contains information about the function and the connection. Therefore, a faulty module can be replaced and the whole system´s functions and connections are maintained by simply assigning the same encoded data to a spare (stem) module. In existing systems, a huge amount of hardware, such as a dynamic routing system, is required for such an operation. The gene-control layer determines the neighboring spare module in the structural layer to replace the faulty module without collision. We verified the proposed mechanism by implementing the system with a field-programmable gate array with the application of a digital clock whose status can be monitored with light-emitting-diodes. In comparison with existing methods, the proposed architecture and mechanism are efficient enough for application with real fault-tolerant systems dealing with harsh and remote environments, such as outer space or deep sea.
  • Keywords
    cellular radio; fault tolerant computing; field programmable gate arrays; light emitting diodes; network routing; redundancy; cell replacement; complex rerouting process; digital clock; dynamic routing system; encoded data; endocrine cellular communication; fault recovery; fault-coverage; fault-tolerant systems; faulty module; field-programmable gate array; functional circuit; gene-control layer; genome; hardware overhead; interconnections; light-emitting-diodes; neighboring spare module; normal operating hardware; self-repairing digital system; spare stem module; structural layer; system functions; system module; unified recovery process; Biochemistry; Bioinformatics; Circuit faults; Computer architecture; Genomics; Hardware; Microprocessors; Bio-inspired engineering; dynamic routing; endocrine cellular communication; redundancy; self-repair; stem cell;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1063-8210
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TVLSI.2012.2203618
  • Filename
    6238448