Title :
Design process model in the Yorktown silicon compiler
Author_Institution :
IBM Thomas J. Watson Res. Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
Abstract :
The automatic synthesis of an IBM 801 processing unit using the Yorktown silicon compiler is presented. The underlying design process model is explained showing the intermediate stages, while emphasizing high-level issues. First, the principles of operations are translated manually into high-level behavioral descriptions. The system is decomposed by the designer into concurrent modules (in the 801, four pipeline stages). Structural synthesis automatically generates a circuit structure for each pipeline stage, including the control and the data path. The combinational logic is optimized globally during logic synthesis producing a multilevel implementation. The resulting size (in number of transistors) and the performance of the processor (estimated cycle time and cycles per instruction) are compared to a manual RT-level design
Keywords :
IBM computers; circuit layout CAD; logic CAD; pipeline processing; CAD; IBM 801 processing unit; Yorktown silicon compiler; automatic synthesis; combinational logic; computer aided design; concurrent modules; design process model; high-level behavioral descriptions; logic synthesis; multilevel implementation; pipeline stages; Automatic generation control; Circuit synthesis; Computer architecture; Control system synthesis; Hardware; Logic; Manuals; Pipelines; Process design; Silicon compiler;
Conference_Titel :
Design Automation Conference, 1988. Proceedings., 25th ACM/IEEE
Conference_Location :
Anaheim, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-0864-1
DOI :
10.1109/DAC.1988.14804