DocumentCode
2889501
Title
The effects of false paths in high-level synthesis
Author
Bergamaschi, R.A.
Author_Institution
IBM Thomas J. Watson Res. Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
fYear
1991
fDate
11-14 Nov. 1991
Firstpage
80
Lastpage
83
Abstract
The author discusses the effects of false paths and their consequences in scheduling and allocation during high-level synthesis. False paths through the control-flow graph may occur due to sequences of conditional operations. The detection of false paths during scheduling may result in a smaller number of states, improved operator sharing, and smaller control logic. A heuristic algorithm is presented for the detection and elimination of false paths during path-based scheduling. Results for benchmark examples are presented. For the designs which contained false paths, the percentage of false paths varied from 5% to 83%. A reduction of 15% in the final cell count for one benchmark was obtained by eliminating false paths. Even though the proposed algorithm is heuristic and cannot guarantee the detection of all false paths, it did find all false paths in the small to medium size examples tried. In most cases the condition trees are small, with few data dependencies, which increases the probability of a false path being found by the algorithm.<>
Keywords
circuit layout CAD; scheduling; allocation; cell count; condition trees; conditional operations; control-flow graph; data dependencies; false paths; heuristic algorithm; high-level synthesis; path-based scheduling; Control system synthesis; Heuristic algorithms; High level synthesis; Logic; Multiplexing; Process control; Processor scheduling; Registers; Scheduling algorithm; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer-Aided Design, 1991. ICCAD-91. Digest of Technical Papers., 1991 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Santa Clara, CA, USA
Print_ISBN
0-8186-2157-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICCAD.1991.185197
Filename
185197
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