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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O Borgatti, M. Lertora, F. Foret, B. Cali, L. STMicroelectronics, Agrate Brianza,Italy IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, March 2003, Volume: 38, Issue: 3, pp.521-529 Presenter: Ching-Chi Hu
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 2/20 2015/5/1 Abstract A system chip targeting image and voice processing and recognition application domains is implemented as a representative of the potential of using programmable logic in system design. It features an embedded reconfigurable processor built by joining a configurable and extensible processor core and an SRAM-based embedded field- programmable gate array (FPGA). Application- specific bus-mapped coprocessors and flexible input/output peripherals and interfaces can also be added and dynamically modified by reconfiguring the embedded FPGA.
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 3/20 2015/5/1 Abstract (Cont.) The architecture of the system is discussed as well as the design flows for pre- and post- silicon design and customization. The silicon area required by the system is 20 mm 2 in a 0.18 μm CMOS technology. The embedded FPGA accounts for about 40% of the system area.
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 4/20 2015/5/1 Motive The economics of system integration pushes logic suppliers toward ever more complex system-chip devices Increasing design complexity and its associated risks, increase of non-recurrent engineering expenses, and shorter time-to- market and product life are causing manufacturers to look for faster turnaround and lower risk solutions for design and technology
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 5/20 2015/5/1 Embedded programmable logic in ASICs On the logic design side, the ASIC introduces many design challenges because performance in terms of density, speed, and power consumption is significantly less aggressive than in cell-based design the use of configurable logic must be limited to what really needs to be programmable for design efficient the integration of programmable hardware in SOC introduces changes in the design flow. Different implementations can also be repeated to produce different configurations for the same chip.
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 6/20 2015/5/1 Embedded programmable logic in ASICs (cont.) the signoff of the system must be done for each configuration, since for every configuration the logic implemented in the e- FPGA must operate correctly and possible timing violations need to be avoided an automated task to solve the logic synthesis and optimization must be performed separately twice, for the hardwired logic and for the configuration logic, respectively.
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 7/20 2015/5/1 Embedded programmable logic in ASICs (cont.)
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 8/20 2015/5/1 System architecture 32 bit Extensible Microprocessor Five-stage pipeline 8 KB direct-mapped data/instruction caches 16/24 bit instruction format 64 bit processor interface (PIF) 48 KB SRAM Embedded FPGA Extension of the processor datapath supporting a set of additional special-purpose instructions Bus-mapped coprocessor Flexible I/O
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 9/20 2015/5/1 System architecture (cont.)
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 10/20 2015/5/1 Microprocessor to FPGA interface The design uses a single context embedded FPGA to extend the instruction set of a commercial microprocessor architecture which allows adding user-defined instructions the number of user-defined instructions available at a given time is limited by the e-FPGA logic capacity and instruction logic complexity the size of the set of additional instructions exceeds the logic capacity of the e-FPGA, it must be split The flexibility advantage of this architecture implies a speed penalty for the part of logic mapped inside the e-FPGA
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 11/20 2015/5/1 Microprocessor to FPGA interface (cont.)
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 12/20 2015/5/1 Microprocessor to FPGA interface (cont.) The synchronization mechanism for two different opcode types
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 13/20 2015/5/1 Block Description of the e-FPGA
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 14/20 2015/5/1 Application example A face recognition system
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 15/20 2015/5/1 Application example (cont.)
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 16/20 2015/5/1 System to RTL design flow soft hardware (reconfigurable logic) to be mapped on the e-FPGA HDL RTL code of instruction extensions bus-mapped coprocessors special-purpose I/O peripherals conventional fixed hardware (hardwired logic) Microprocessor RTL code AHB/APB bus peripherals; embedded software (C code) application software low-level drivers for the hardware platform
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 17/20 2015/5/1 System to RTL design flow (cont.)
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 18/20 2015/5/1 RTL to Layout design flow
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 19/20 2015/5/1 System implementation Technology: 0.18μm CMOS 6-ML SRAM: Main 48KB (64-bit wide) Memory: I$:8KB D$:8KB (64-bit wide) Buffers: 4x256B (8-bit wide) Chip size: 5.5x5.5 mm 2 (pad limited) Core size: 20 mm 2 E-FPGA size: 8.2 mm 2 (15K useable equivalent ASIC gates) Customizable I/O: 24 general- purpose input/output and 8 general- purpose bidirs Power supply: 2.7-3.6V (external), 1.8V (core, internally generated/regulated)
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A reconfigurable system featuring dynamically extensible embedded microprocessor, FPGA, and customizable I/O 20/20 2015/5/1 Conclusion a novel system architecture based on a reconfigurable microprocessor has been presented and its implementation using embedded FPGA technology The future work is investigated the impact of dynamic hardware configuration on energy efficiency of the computing system
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