scholarly journals IP-Enabled C/C++ Based High Level Synthesis: A Step towards Better Designer Productivity and Design Performance

2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Sharad Sinha ◽  
Thambipillai Srikanthan

Intellectual property (IP) core based design is an emerging design methodology to deal with increasing chip design complexity. C/C++ based high level synthesis (HLS) is also gaining traction as a design methodology to deal with increasing design complexity. In the work presented here, we present a design methodology that combines these two individual methodologies and is therefore more powerful. We discuss our proposed methodology in the context of supporting efficient hardware synthesis of a class of mathematical functions without altering original C/C++ source code. Additionally, we also discuss and propose methods to integrate legacy IP cores in existing HLS flows. Relying on concepts from the domains of program recognition and optimized low level implementations of such arithmetic functions, the described design methodology is a step towards intelligent synthesis where application characteristics are matched with specific architectural resources and relevant IP cores in a transparent manner for improved area-delay results. The combined methodology is more aware of the target hardware architecture than the conventional HLS flow. Implementation results of certain compute kernels from a commercial tool Vivado-HLS as well as proposed flow are also compared to show that proposed flow gives better results.

1992 ◽  
pp. 297-335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel D. Gajski ◽  
Nikil D. Dutt ◽  
Allen C-H Wu ◽  
Steve Y-L Lin

2012 ◽  
Vol 03 (01) ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erdal Oruklu ◽  
Richard Hanley ◽  
Semih Aslan ◽  
Christophe Desmouliers ◽  
Fernando M. Vallina ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Curreri ◽  
Greg Stitt ◽  
Alan D. George

Despite significant performance and power advantages compared to microprocessors, widespread usage of FPGAs has been limited by increased design complexity. High-level synthesis (HLS) tools have reduced design complexity but provide limited support for verification, debugging, and timing analysis. Such tools generally rely on inaccurate software simulation or lengthy register-transfer-level simulations, which are unattractive to software developers. In this paper, we introduce HLS techniques that allow application designers to efficiently synthesize commonly used ANSI-C assertions into FPGA circuits, enabling verification and debugging of circuits generated from HLS tools, while executing in the actual FPGA environment. To verify that HLS-generated circuits meet execution timing constraints, we extend the in-circuit assertion support for testing of elapsed time for arbitrary regions of code. Furthermore, we generalize timing assertions to transparently provide hang detection that back annotates hang occurrences to source code. The presented techniques enable software developers to rapidly verify, debug, and analyze timing for FPGA applications, while reducing frequency by less than 3% and increasing FPGA resource utilization by 0.7% or less for several application case studies on the Altera Stratix-II EP2S180 and Stratix-III EP3SE260 using Impulse-C. The presented techniques reduced area overhead by as much as 3x and improved assertion performance by as much as 100% compared to unoptimized in-circuit assertions.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document