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A System for Automatic Recording and Prediction of Design Quality Metrics Andrew B. Kahng and Stefanus Mantik* UCSD CSE and ECE Depts., La Jolla, CA *UCLA CS Dept., Los Angeles, CA
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Introduction Time-to-market window is shrinking very rapidly Product quality and design process must continually improve Currently, there are no standards or infrastructure for measuring and recording the semiconductor design process METRICS provides Standard infrastructure for the collection and the storage of design process information Standard list of design metrics and process metrics Analyses and reports that are useful for design process optimization METRICS allows: Collect, Data-Mine, Measure, Diagnose, then Improve
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Related Works Enterprise- and project-level metrics (“Numetrics Complexity Unit”) Numetrics Management Systems DPMS Other in-house data collection systems e.g., TI (DAC 96 BOF), OxSigen LLC (Siemens Semiconductor) Design Process Management [Jacome93, Brockman92, Johnson96] Web-based design support IPSymphony, WELD, VELA, etc. Continuous process improvement Data mining and visualization
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Outline METRICS system architecture and standards METRICS for design flow Flow METRICS experiments METRICS integration with datamining Datamining integration experiments Issues and conclusions
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METRICS System Architecture Inter/Intra-net DB Metrics Data Warehouse Web Server Java Applets Data Mining Reporting Transmitter wrapper Tool Transmitter API XML
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Generic and Specific Tool Metrics Partial list of metrics now being collected in Oracle8i
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Outline METRICS system architecture and standards METRICS for design flow Flow METRICS experiments METRICS integration with datamining Datamining integration experiments Issues and conclusions
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Flow Metrics Tool metrics alone are not enough Design process consists of more than one tool A given tool can be run multiple times Design quality depends on the design flow and methodology (the order of the tools and the iteration within the flow) Flow definition Directed graph G (V,E) V T { S, F } T { T 1, T 2, T 3, …, T n } (a set of tasks) S starting node, F ending node E { E s1, E 11, E 12, …, E xy } (a set of edges) E xy x < y forward path x = y self-loop x > y backward path
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Flow Example S T1T1 T2T2 T3T3 T4T4 F Optional task Task sequence: T 1, T 2, T 1, T 2, T 3, T 3, T 3, T 4, T 2, T 1, T 2, T 4 S T1T1 T2T2 F T1T1 T2T2 T3T3 T3T3 T3T3 T4T4 T2T2 T1T1 T2T2 T4T4
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Flow Tracking S T1T1 T2T2 F T1T1 T2T2 T3T3 T3T3 T3T3 T4T4 T2T2 T1T1 T2T2 T4T4 Task sequence: T 1, T 2, T 1, T 2, T 3, T 3, T 3, T 4, T 2, T 1, T 2, T 4
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NELSIS Flow Manager Integration Flow managed by NELSIS
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Optimization of Incremental Multilevel FM Partitioning Motivation: Incremental Netlist Partitioning netlist ECOs are made; want top-down placement to remain similar to previous result good approach [CaldwellKM00]: “V-cycling” based multilevel Fiduccia-Mattheyses what is the best tuning of the approach for a given instance? break up the ECO perturbation into multiple smaller perturbations? #starts of the partitioner? within a specified CPU budget?
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Optimization of Incremental Multilevel FM Partitioning (contd.) Given: initial partitioning solution, CPU budget and instance perturbations ( I) Find: number of parts of incremental partitioning and number of starts T i = incremental multilevel FM partitioning Self-loop multistart n number of breakups ( I = 1 + 2 + 3 +... + n ) S T1T1 F T2T2 T3T3 TnTn...
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Multilevel FM Experiment Flow Setup foreach testcase foreach I foreach CPU budget foreach breakup I current = I initial S current = S initial for i = 1 to n I next = I current + i run incremental multilevel FM partitioner on I next to produce S next if CPU current > CPU budget then break I current = I next S current = S next end
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Flow Optimization Results If (27401 < num edges 34826) and (143.09 < cpu time 165.28) and (perturbation delta 0.1) then num_inc_parts = 4 and num_starts = 3 If (27401 < num edges 34826) and (85.27 < cpu time 143.09) and (perturbation delta 0.1) then num_inc_parts = 2 and num_starts = 1... Actual CPU Time (secs) Predicted CPU Time (secs)
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Identifying the Effect of Wire Load Model Wire load model (WLM) is used for pre-layout estimation of wire delays Three different WLMs statistical WLM structural WLM custom WLM Motivation: identify if WLMs are useful for estimation identify if WLMs are necessary for optimization identify the best role of WLMs
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Wire Load Model Flow WLM flows for finding the appropriate role of WLM T 1 = synthesis & technology mapping T 2 = load wire load model (WLM) T 3 = pre-placement optimization T 4 = placement T 5 = post-placement optimization T 6 = global routing T 7 = final routing T 8 = custom WLM generation S T1T1 T2T2 T3T3 T4T4 F T5T5 T7T7 T8T8 T6T6
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WLM Experiment Setup foreach testcase foreach WLM (statistical, structural, custom, and no WLM) foreach flow variant run PKS flow if WLM = structural then generate custom WLM end 6 different flow variants
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WLM Flow Results Slack comparison for 6 flow variants Post-placement and pre-placement optimizations are important steps Choice of WLM depends on the design WLMs are still useful
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Outline METRICS system architecture and standards METRICS for design flow Flow METRICS experiments METRICS integration with datamining Datamining integration experiments Issues and conclusions
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Datamining Integration Database Datamining Tool(s) Datamining Interface Java Servlet Java Servlet SQL Tables Results DM Requests Inter-/Intranet
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Categories of Data for DataMining Design instances and design parameters attributes and metrics of the design instances e.g., number of gates, target clock frequency, number of metal layers, etc. CAD tools and invocation options list of tools and user options that are available e.g., tool version, optimism level, timing driven option, etc. Design solutions and result qualities qualities of the solutions obtained from given tools and design instances e.g., number of timing violations, total tool runtime, layout area, etc.
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Possible Usage of DataMining Design instances and design parameters CAD tools and invocation options Design solutions and result qualities Given and , estimate the expected quality of e.g., runtime predictions, wirelength estimations, etc. Given and , find the appropriate setting of e.g., best value for a specific option, etc. Given and , identify the subspace of that is “doable” for the tool e.g., category of designs that are suitable for the given tools, etc.
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Example Applications with DM Parameter sensitivity analysis input parameters that have the most impact on results Field of use analysis limits at which the tool will break tool sweet spots at which the tool will give best results Process monitoring identify possible failure in the process (e.g., timing constraints are too tight, row utilization is too high, etc.) Resource monitoring analysis of resource demands (e.g., disk space, memory, etc.)
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DM Results: QPlace CPU Time If (num nets 7332) then CPU time = 21.9 + 0.0019 num cells + 0.0005 num nets + 0.07 num pads - 0.0002 num fixed cells If (num overlap layers = 0) and (num cells 71413) and (TD routing option = false) then CPU time = -15.6 + 0.0888 num nets - 0.0559 num cells - 0.0015 num fixed cells - num routing layer... Actual CPU Time (secs) Predicted CPU Time (secs)
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Selection for Training and Test Sets Random Case randomly select runs assigned to training set leave all remained (unselected) runs for test set Distinct Case split the test cases into two distinct sets, the training set and the test set assign the runs accordingly Representative Case split the test cases into two distinct sets and assign the runs accordingly for each test case in the test set, move exactly one run to the training set I.e., for each test case, there is at least one representative run in the training set
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Prediction Result Variances Random CaseDistinct Case Representative Case Prediction of QP Wirelength
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CTGen Results Max Insertion Delay (ns) Min Insertion Delay (ns) Max Skew
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Outline METRICS system architecture and standards METRICS for design flow Flow METRICS experiments METRICS integration with datamining Datamining integration experiments Issues and conclusions
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Conclusions Extensions to current METRICS system is presented Complete prototype of METRICS system is working at UCLA with Oracle8i, Java Servlet and XML (other working prototypes are installed at Intel and Cadence) METRICS wrappers for Cadence, Synopsys and UCLA tools and flows METRICS system is integrated with Cubist datamining tool and NELSIS flow manager A complete METRICS system can be installed on a laptop and configured to work behind firewalls
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Issues and Ongoing Work Issues for METRICS constituencies to solve security: proprietary and confidential information standardization: flow, terminology, data management, etc. social: “big brother”, collection of social metrics, etc. Ongoing work with EDA, designer communities to identify tool metrics of interest users: metrics needed for design process insight, optimization vendors: implementation of the metrics requested, with standardized naming / semantics
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http://vlsicad.cs.ucla.edu/GSRC/METRICS
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