Title :
Speedups from partitioning software kernels to FPGA hardware in embedded SoCs
Author :
Galanis, M.D. ; Dimitroulakos, G. ; Kakarountas, A.P. ; Goutis, C.E.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Patras Univ., Greece
Abstract :
This paper presents a hardware/software partitioning methodology for improving performance in single-chip systems comprised by processor and reconfigurable logic. The reconfigurable logic is realized by field programmable gate array technology. Critical software parts are selected for acceleration on the reconfigurable logic. A generic hybrid system-on-chip platform, which can model the majority of existing processor-FPGA systems, is considered by the method. The partitioning method uses an automated kernel identification process at the basic-block level for detecting critical software portions. Three different instances of the generic platform and two sets of benchmarks are used in the experiments. The analysis on five real-life applications showed that these applications spend an average of 69% of their instruction count in 11% on average of their code. The extensive experimentation illustrates that for the systems composed by 32-bit processors the speedup of five applications ranges from 1.3 to 3.7 relative to an all software solution. For a platform composed by an 8-bit processor, the performance gains of eight DSP algorithms are considerably greater, since the average speedup equals 28.
Keywords :
embedded systems; field programmable gate arrays; hardware-software codesign; system-on-chip; DSP algorithms; FPGA hardware; automated kernel identification process; critical software portions; embedded SoC; field programmable gate array technology; partitioning software kernels; reconfigurable logic; single-chip systems; system-on-chip platform; Acceleration; Application software; Embedded software; Field programmable gate arrays; Hardware; Kernel; Programmable logic arrays; Reconfigurable logic; Software performance; System-on-a-chip;
Conference_Titel :
Signal Processing Systems Design and Implementation, 2005. IEEE Workshop on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9333-3
DOI :
10.1109/SIPS.2005.1579917