Title :
A Study of Finite State Machine Coding Styles for Implementation in FPGAs
Author :
Rafla, Nader I. ; Davis, Brett LaVoy
Author_Institution :
Electrical and Computer Engineering, Boise State University, Boise, Idaho. nrafla@boisestate.edu
Abstract :
Finite State Machines (FSM), are one of the more complex structures found in almost all digital systems today. Hardware Description Languages are used for high-level digital system design. VHDL (VHSIC Hardware Description Language) provides the capability of different coding styles for FSMs. Therefore, a choice of a coding style is needed to achieve specific performance goals and to minimize resource utilization for implementation in a re-configurable computing environment such as an FPGA. This paper is a study of the tradeoffs that can be made by changing coding styles. A comparative study on three different FSM coding styles is shown to address their impact on performance and resource utilization for the most commonly used encoding methods for FPGA designs. The results show that a particular coding style leads to a savings in resource utilization with a significant performance improvement over the others while the others pose a consistent performance regardless of the resource utilization outcome.
Keywords :
Automata; Computer languages; Design engineering; Design methodology; Digital systems; Encoding; Field programmable gate arrays; Hardware design languages; Resource management; Very high speed integrated circuits;
Conference_Titel :
Circuits and Systems, 2006. MWSCAS '06. 49th IEEE International Midwest Symposium on
Conference_Location :
San Juan, PR
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0172-0
Electronic_ISBN :
1548-3746
DOI :
10.1109/MWSCAS.2006.382066