Formal Approaches to Globally Asynchronous and Locally Synchronous Design

dc.contributor.authorXue, Binen
dc.contributor.committeechairShukla, Sandeep K.en
dc.contributor.committeememberRavi, S. S.en
dc.contributor.committeememberNazhandali, Leylaen
dc.contributor.committeememberHsiao, Michael S.en
dc.contributor.committeememberSchaumont, Patrick R.en
dc.contributor.committeememberMarathe, Madhav V.en
dc.contributor.departmentElectrical and Computer Engineeringen
dc.date.accessioned2014-03-14T20:15:55Zen
dc.date.adate2011-09-30en
dc.date.available2014-03-14T20:15:55Zen
dc.date.issued2011-08-22en
dc.date.rdate2011-09-30en
dc.date.sdate2011-09-05en
dc.description.abstractThe research reported in this dissertation is motivated by two trends in the system-on-chip (SoC) design industry. First, due to the incessant technology scaling, the interconnect delays are getting larger compared to gate delays, leading to multi-cycle delays in communication between functional blocks on the chip, which makes implementing a synchronous global clock difficult, and power consuming. As a result, globally asynchronous and locally synchronous (GALS) designs have been proposed for future SoCs. Second, due to time-to-market pressure, and productivity gain, intellectual property (IP) block reuse is a rising trend in SoC design industry. Predesigned IPs may already be optimized and verified for timing for certain clock frequency, and hence when used in an SoC, GALS offers a good solution that avoids reoptimizing or redesigning the existing IPs. A special case of GALS, known as Latency-Insensitive Protocol (LIP) lets designers adopt the well-understood and developed design flow of synchronous design while solving the multi-cycle latency at the interconnects. The communication fabrics for LIP are synchronous pipelines with hand shaking. However, handshake based protocol has complex control logics and the unnecessary handshake brings down the system's throughput. That is why scheduling based LIP was proposed to avoid the hand-shakes by pre-calculated clock gating sequences for each block. It is shown to have better throughput and easier to implement. Unfortunately, static scheduling only exists for bounded systems. Therefore, this type of design in literatures restrict their discussions to systems whose graphic representation has a single strongly connected component (SCC), which by the theory is bounded. This dissertation provides an optimization design flow for LIP synthesis with respect to back pressure, throughput and buffer sizes. This is based on extending the scheduled LIP with minimum modifications to render it general enough to be applicable to most systems, especially those with multiple SCCs. In order to guarantee the design correctness, a formal framework that can analyze concurrency and prevent fallacious behaviors such as overflow, deadlock etc., is required. Among many formal models of concurrency used previously in asynchronous system design, marked graphs, periodic clock calculus and polychrony are chosen for the purpose of modeling, analyzing and verifying in this work. Polychrony, originally developed for embedded software modeling and synthesis, is able to specify multi-rate interfaces. Then a synchronous composition can be analyzed to avoid incompatibly and combinational loops which causes incorrect GALS distribution. The marked graph model is a good candidate to represent the interconnection network which is quite suitable for modeling the communication and synchronizations in LIP. The periodic clock calculus is useful in analyzing clock gating sequences because periodic clock calculus easily captures data dependencies, throughput constraints as well as buffer sizes required for synchronization. These formal methods help establish a formally based design flow for creating a synchronous design and then transforming it into a GALS implementation either using LIP or in a more general GALS mechanisms.en
dc.description.degreePh. D.en
dc.identifier.otheretd-09052011-092629en
dc.identifier.sourceurlhttp://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09052011-092629/en
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10919/28874en
dc.publisherVirginia Techen
dc.relation.haspartXue_B_D_2011.pdfen
dc.rightsIn Copyrighten
dc.rights.urihttp://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/en
dc.subjectverificationen
dc.subjectpolychronous formalismen
dc.subjectthroughputen
dc.subjectback pressureen
dc.subjectmarked graphen
dc.subjectlatency insensitive systemen
dc.subjectschedulingen
dc.titleFormal Approaches to Globally Asynchronous and Locally Synchronous Designen
dc.typeDissertationen
thesis.degree.disciplineElectrical and Computer Engineeringen
thesis.degree.grantorVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State Universityen
thesis.degree.leveldoctoralen
thesis.degree.namePh. D.en

Files

Original bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
Xue_B_D_2011.pdf
Size:
1.26 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format