DocumentCode :
3511937
Title :
Reconfigurable computing: a new business model-and its impact on SoC design
Author :
Hartenstein, Reiner
Author_Institution :
Kaiserslautern Univ., Germany
fYear :
2001
fDate :
2001
Firstpage :
103
Lastpage :
110
Abstract :
Making gate arrays obsolete, FPGAs are successfully proceeding from niche to mainstream. Like microprocessor usage, FPGA application is RAM-based, but by structural programming (also called “(re)configuration”) instead of procedural programming. Now both, host and accelerator are RAM-based and as such also available on the same chip: a new approach to SoC design. Now also accelerator definition may be-at least partly-conveyed from vendor site to customer site. A new business model is needed. But this paradigm switch is still ignored: FPGAs do not repeat the RAM-based success story of the software industry. There is not yet a configware industry, since mapping applications onto FPGAs mainly uses hardware syntheses method. From a decade of world-wide research on Reconfigurable Computing another breed of reconfigurable platforms is an emerging future competitor to FPGAs. Supporting roughly single bit wide configurable logic blocks (CLBs) the mapping tools are mainly based on gate level methods-similar to CAD for hardware logic. In contrast to this fine-grained arrays of coarse-grained reconfigurable datapath units (rDPUs) with drastically reduced reconfigurability overhead: to directly configure high level parallelism. But the “von Neumann” paradigm does not support soft datapaths because “instruction fetch” is not done at run time, and, since most reconfigurable computing arrays do not run parallel processes, but multiple pipe networks instead
Keywords :
field programmable gate arrays; logic design; FPGAs; SoC design; accelerator design; business model; configurable logic blocks; gate arrays; hardware syntheses method; microprocessor; reconfigurable computing; software industry; structural programming; Application software; Computer industry; Computer networks; Field programmable gate arrays; Hardware; Logic design; Microprocessors; Parallel processing; Reconfigurable logic; Switches;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Digital Systems Design, 2001. Proceedings. Euromicro Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Warsaw
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1239-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/DSD.2001.952125
Filename :
952125
Link To Document :
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