• DocumentCode
    2786488
  • Title

    A Low-Energy Reconfigurable Fabric for the SuperCISC Architecture

  • Author

    Mehta, Gayatri ; Hoare, Raymond R. ; Stander, Justin ; Jones, Alex K.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Pittsburgh Univ., PA
  • fYear
    2006
  • fDate
    24-26 April 2006
  • Firstpage
    309
  • Lastpage
    310
  • Abstract
    Hardware acceleration using field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) has become increasingly popular for computationally intensive digital signal processing (DSP) applications. Unfortunately, while FPGAs have a reasonably tractable computer aided design (CAD) flow and performance, they have poor power characteristics when compared to direct application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) fabrication. ASICs exhibit better performance and power than FPGAs, but require complex CAD and large non-recurring engineering (NRE) costs. A reconfigurable device that exhibits ASIC-like power characteristics and FPGA-like costs and tool support is desirable to fill this void. Several coarse-grained fabric architectures proposed during the last decade have been focused on performance and area-efficient architectural techniques. Even though power is becoming one of the critical design concerns for semiconductor industry, this issue has not been adequately addressed in the existing coarse-grained fabric architectures. In this paper, a low-power and high-performance hardware acceleration engine for DSP style applications is described. This reconfigurable fabric model is generic and parameterizable allowing design parameters to be adjusted within the architecture. The impact of varying different design parameters such as functional unit granularity, and multiplexer cardinality are studied for their implications on power and performance. The low-power fabric was designed to operate within the SuperCISC processor architecture designed at the University of Pittsburgh
  • Keywords
    digital signal processing chips; instruction sets; reconfigurable architectures; DSP; SuperCISC architecture; University of Pittsburgh; design parameters; digital signal processing; hardware acceleration engine; reconfigurable fabric; Acceleration; Application software; Application specific integrated circuits; Costs; Design automation; Digital signal processing; Fabrics; Field programmable gate arrays; Hardware; Power engineering computing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Field-Programmable Custom Computing Machines, 2006. FCCM '06. 14th Annual IEEE Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Napa, CA
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-2661-6
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/FCCM.2006.9
  • Filename
    4020934