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Area optimization of multi-cycle operators in high-level synthesis
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Source Design, Automation, and Test in Europe archive
Proceedings of the conference on Design, automation and test in Europe table of contents
Nice, France
SESSION: Automatic synthesis of computation intensive application specific circuits table of contents
Pages: 449 - 454  
Year of Publication: 2007
ISBN:978-3-9810801-2-4
Authors
M. C. Molina  Universidad Complutense de Madrid
R. Ruiz-Sautua  Universidad Complutense de Madrid
J. M. Mendías  Universidad Complutense de Madrid
R. Hermida  Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Sponsors
: IEEE Council on Electronic Design Automation (CEDA)
: The EDA Consortium
EDAA : European Design and Automation Association
SIGDA : ACM Design Automation
RAS : RAS
: The IEEE Computer Society TTTC
: ECSI
Publisher
EDA Consortium  San Jose, CA, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 5,   Downloads (12 Months): 43,   Citation Count: 0
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ABSTRACT

Conventional high-level synthesis algorithms usually employ multi-cycle operators to reduce the cycle length in order to improve the circuit performance. These operators need several cycles to execute one operation, but the entire functional unit is not used in any cycle. Additionally, the execution of operations over wider multi-cycle operators is unfeasible if their results must be available in a smaller number of cycles than the functional unit delay. This obliges to add new functional resources to the datapath even if multi-cycle operators are idle when the execution of the operation begins.

In this paper a new design technique to overcome the restricted reusability of multi-cycle operators is presented. It reduces the area of these functional units allowing their internal reuse when executing one operation. It also expands the possibilities of common hardware sharing as it allows the partial use of multi-cycle operators to calculate narrower operations faster than the functional unit delay. This technique is applied as an optimization phase at the end of the high-level synthesis process, and can optimize the circuits synthesized by any high-level synthesis tool.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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V. Raghunathan, S. Ravi, and G. Lakshminarayana. "Integrating Variable-Latency Components into High-Level Synthesis". IEEE Trans. on CAD, October 2000.
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Collaborative Colleagues:
M. C. Molina: colleagues
R. Ruiz-Sautua: colleagues
J. M. Mendías: colleagues
R. Hermida: colleagues