| A practical moat router |
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Annual ACM IEEE Design Automation Conference
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Proceedings of the 24th ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conference
table of contents
Miami Beach, Florida, United States
Pages: 216 - 222
Year of Publication: 1987
ISBN:0-8186-0781-5
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Author
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R. K. McGehee
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Seattle Silicon Corporation, 3075 112th Ave. N.E., Bellevue, Washington
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 1, Downloads (12 Months): 2, Citation Count: 2
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ABSTRACT
The final step in the layout of integrated circuits involves connecting a central module to a surrounding ring of pads. Hence the region to be routed is in the shape of a moat. This paper presents a practical approach to the moat routing problem. The approach is based on an efficient channel routing algorithm with additional features addressing the characteristics of the moat configuration. While signal nets are similar to those of a channel router, power nets are routed in a single layer of metal. The geometry of the moat imposes some restrictions, but often allows additional compaction of the routes. Each side of the moat requires a different amount of space to complete the routing, and each side of the pad ring may be moved independently. This produces an asymmetrical moat, which minimizes chip area and guarantees 100 percent routing completion.
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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Smith, Lyle R., et. al., "A New Area Router, the LRS Algorithm," IEEE ICCC '82, (Sept.-Oct. 1982), pp. 256-259.
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LaPaugh, Andrea S., "A Polynomial Time Algorithm for Optimal Routing Around a Rectangle," Proc. 21st Annual IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science, October 1980, pp. 282-293.
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